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Zbrte s
Diablo Heights, Pedro Miguel,
Cocoli and Balboa, starting at
7:30. m. .v x
Brief ceremonies, which Include
the placing of floral tributes will
be held by Boy and -Girl Scouts
at 8 p.m. wun R. c. worsiey as
Slstins. v
Boy scouts Willi place floral
tributes at the Columbarium in
the All Soul's Chapel at the Ca Cathedral
thedral Cathedral pf 8t. Luke's in Ancon at
8:15. -. 7 t ,
At 9:15, a special train will
leave the Balboa; Heights Kail-'
road Station for Corozal; The
public Is invited to utilize this
courtesy- extended by the Pana Panama
ma Panama Canal Company in eoincr to
and returning from the Corozal
Memorial: Day Exercises. ;
' At 11 a.m. Veterans of Foreign
Wars and the American Learion
will decorate graves at the Ama Amador
dor Amador Cemetery in Panama.
At,l pjn. the Veterans of ror ror-elen
elen ror-elen Wars, the American Legion
Land the Paraiso Mutual Aid Club
will hold memorial services at
the Paraiso memorial nlaaue In
honor of Panamanians who died
in the Korean war. CoL Joseph
R. Walton. Provost Marshal. is
scheduled to be guest speaker at
the paraiso ceremonies. -v
The services at sea will be held
aboard the USNS Owl beginning
at 1 pjn. ; .j.?, .-.."iv-t-v.-
On the Atlantic side, obsery-
nces.wiu pegin ai :30 a.m witn
a parade In Margarita and cer
emonies at the Mt. Hope Ceme
tery at which Gor, Potter will be
net speaKer...;.; -tvrty
Gov. Potter today called atten
tlon to the proclamation issued
by President Eisenhower in which
ne asked air American citizens
io aeaicaie ine oay i to prayer
ana 10 ronnr ineir IPiinw riti
7ptis v Laa t vra t1- r I
llclCsninlttcs
Approves Alaska ?
Statehood Dili :
WASHINGTON, Miy (UPV-
"ine House interior Commtttee
quickly approved the Alaska state.
flood bill today after stripping it
of a proviso to require a special
election before the territory could
enter the union. a
The vote was 24 to
The committee rejected the e
lection amendment on a 15 to IS
roll call vote after a sharp dispute
over a proxy vote cast against
the provision in behalf of Rep.
Charles C. Diggs Jr. (D-Mkh.).
With the fate of the amendment
hanging on the single vote, Rep.
A. L. Miller (R-Neb.) challenged
the authenticity of, the proxy vote
offered by Alaskan delegate E. L.
Bartlett -' s ,i. .;

I Dai
J.

Boy, 12, Who Saved Baby's Ufe :
"Belatedly Recognized As Hero

CHICAGO May (UP) A
boy. 12. who saved a baby's life
by breakrnr the infant's fall
from a second story window, won
belated recognition today as a
hero.
Little Jimmy Thomas had kept
mum about his role in the inci
dent last Saturday because he
was ashamed that he. hadnt
caught the falling infant.
Doctors at Garfield Park Hos Hos-pitah
pitah Hos-pitah said the baby would have
been-killed if Jimmy had not
broken his fall. The infant suf suffered,
fered, suffered, a skull fracture, they said,
but will probably lire.
Jimmy tearfully owned np to
his heroism Monday under ques questioning
tioning questioning from hU father. The boy
said he felt guilty because the
baby slipped through his arms
ad bad to be taken to a hospi hospital.
tal. hospital. A
- Jimmy said he and his broth brother.
er. brother. Tommy, 10, were playing in
their coaster weron at the back
of their home when a lootball
flew out of a avennd atorr win-
dow.
Moments later, they saw Billy

Wayne Taylor, 21 months old. of generations, but the wsy Toby
erawline- ot of the window after Bruce figures it, if yon aiat jot
the football. IwhitUers. checker players and
"Go back, little boy, to back.";nicknames it's not the real thing.
Jimmt screamed. But Billv paid! These are bane -ingredients of

nn ttctlon and fell from the
ledce.

JimmT ran to the house. Taeld'olace of some i.ooo rurredly in

put his arms clenched his teeth
and braced himself as hard as
he could. The 35-pound baby hit)
Tinmrt irrri the lUnried

THE PJJLSE.
OF i PANAMA
A SPECIAL MEETING will be
held by the Panama City Council
tonight to discuss the rejection
by the Panama jtierza y l,vz uo
?y tt
)f a
request for the revision of
the company's contract with tlie
Panama municipality.
El Dia speculated that serious
charges will be hurled at the
firm at tonight's meeting, which
will be broadcast over a local ra radio
dio radio network.
A recent ruling which prohib prohibits
its prohibits the sale of alkalizers, analge analgesics
sics analgesics and special powdered milk
formulas in any other establish establishment
ment establishment but a drug store has ap apparently
parently apparently started trend; ?
El Dia's Colon correspondent
reports that a group of restau restaurant
rant restaurant owners are starting a move movement
ment movement to get the government to
clamp down on the sale of hot
dogs, hard boiled eggs and other
snacks in cantinas which have
m adjoining restaurants.
The group will also seek to bar
drug stores- from selling Items
like perfumes, school supplies,
lottery tickets and other non nonmedical
medical nonmedical items, the correspondent
ald.- ''. y-V ;"'
The price of onions went : np
two cents a pound today; accord according
ing according to a communique issued by
the price Regulating Office.
L Hora quoted farmers of
Nuevo Emperador today as ay ay-ing
ing ay-ing they have been given six
months to get off Jand they
have been cultivating within the
jurisdiction of the Canal Zone.
A spokesman for-the farmers
was quoted as denying that Ca Canal
nal Canal Zono authorities had burned
their homes or mister d them;
in buy waj.nuntvci, .t"
man rrq;revi.ea mit r coj- c
will have to .abantion farniwnus
they have been, occupying for as
lone- as SO arearsv n
He said they have asked the
Panama government to provide!
new areaa icr tnern.
Panama University
0 f f e rs Am erica ns:v
New; Spanish Class
A new Spanish course for Eng English
lish English speaking people will be held
t the University of Panama from
June I to July 18, 1957. Classes
will be conducted in th morning
hours on Monday, Wednesday and
Thursday. Elementary Spanish at
8:30; intermediate -Spanish at ft:
30 and advanced Spanish at 10:30
a.m. "j.
Emphasis will be-given to con conversation
versation conversation and translation, j -'
Registration is open at the Sec Secretary's
retary's Secretary's Office from to 12 'and
from s to p.m. r ,. ?
window." Mrs. Thomas notified
tha fire department and the po police.
lice. police. Jimmy was ignored In the
excitement but watched' fear fearfully
fully fearfully in the baekeround.
A neighbor whn had an thu

baby fall later mentioned thel The incident leading up to his
incident and asked about- the arrest occurred yesterday morn morn-"llttle
"llttle morn-"llttle boy who saved the baby'aling at the main gate of .Plet 18
llfeThe word spread around theita Balboa where lie was refused
district, but nobody knew who! entrance bv the guards since he

By DOC QUIGO
VZW YORK (UP ViTiat
is the
mall
real essenca of a rural a
town? Weil, there have been some
changes made in the last couple
the old-timt midwestern type of
ftnaU town. Lit PiggoU. Ark., a
dependent souls where Toby grew
up.
If yoeYe a whittler in Pirjort,
Ttu'r richt-smart oast snid&e see
are semi-retired, and about
I o'clock erery morning yon tare
tmir nlir m on of the wooden
benches under the maple tres

l -1 If ui 1 -v
Labor Le
rnnoritnlalnrr .CBblfBrltlS
on
h unmnletion yesterday ot nis
first vear as Oovernor tit tne va
p, I 1
rave, oeen-receiveu 'ujt
. : i u..
Gov. vvV E. Potter from a ozen
i. w iprfr In the United States'.
The messages ranged rrom riet,f
onenentence caDiei, w i v u k
messages, .s' i- '.v 'A "'
, Labor orttaniiations represent
ed by the- congratulations were:
The Order d Kaiiway yonuue-
tora and Brakemen; yu" i
The Brotherhood or i-ocomouv
Engineers, two of whose top om om-ciah
ciah om-ciah sent messages
The KFlr 4 jiu uneramencan
branch, represented by ;,- Serafino
Romualdi; ,.'' V
The International Brotnernooa ox
Electrical Workers;
y. The International Union of .O-
naratinv Rn'ffineeri: ''"
lie Metal iTaaes teprvuiBu.v
tne ai LrCiu sna r j
The International Assoclatioa of
Wlr. lohtr. ;
. others endin messages were
Louis Damiani, legislative repre
sentative of the Canal zone (j an antral
tral antral Labor Union,' and George f J.
Third-Time
Panamanian Dram
Tcii Day Sertlence
Oeorea rt. Gllnin should nave
realized that after. three etrjs
you are oui t ?;- e
vtrdav. the SO-year-old
Panamanian faced the Balboa
Magistrate for the third. time
on the same charge, of disturb-
1n th neace bv flehtUlB
j had no official business on tne
nremlses. -.-
' GUoln pleaded not rulltt -to
the charge of ,being loud and
disorderly, and Quarreling. But
Judge John K. Deming found
the defendant guilty as charged
and sentenced him to spend the
next 10 days In jail. ; v
- Yon whittle with a pocket Ttnife
on a cedar stick' air day, with
maybe a break for noonitme din dining.
ing. dining. You sit with SO to 100 other
whittlers, saying little, shaving off
rstor thin slivers with long,
smooth, awsy-from the -' body
strokes that are almost a rhythm.
Anybody who whittles toward
himself a real .square. You don't
whittle te carve out anything? You
just do tt for the art of whittling.
Early next morning, a handyman
cleans the courthouse yard of
the piles of tharings, and the pro process
cess process is repeated.
If you're not a whittler. -, yon
may be a checker player, and you
j inhabit the same region, playing
mostly op on the bandstand. On s
Saturdsv there may be as raeny
! plsyers and kibitiers gsth-

sty

Potter' Waff attend luncheon
Pottex "staff :. attend luncheon
W
ji i
Rlchardson who was here recent-
ly as personal rPpresentative : ot
AFL-CIO president George JUeaiiy.
Completion of Patter's .-first
year in office -swas -jnarkedhera
this week at two luncheons: one
sUended by his staff, the .other
byTrepresentatives, of locaI;,lsbor
groups v ,., ' )
The, oast year hss beea event
ful, not only for the Governor but
for the entire Canal Zone. Zone.-One
One Zone.-One of Potter' : first steps wss
to inaugurate the present form
of town' meetings,- where he has
appeared. regularly. ..
The: new governor had barely
settled into his new job when the
Presidents of the American na nations
tions nations gathered in Panama, and his
days then were -divided between
activities in the Republic and
serving as host to those hesds Of
state who visited the Canal Zone.
Whithin a few weeks, he was
called on to m ake the top level
decisions necessary in connection
with the limitation of commissary
privileges, as provided by the 1955
Treaty... ..
The past year has also seen
the adoption of a Group Health
Insurance Program, and the inau inauguration'
guration' inauguration' of planning for a Unit United
ed United Fund drive, to r e p 1 a-c e the
Wilson Crook
v,'V' -.
Suffers Stroke
' WUsoa H. Crook, Supply and
Employe Service Bureau direc director,
tor, director, was taken to Gorgas Hos Hos-.
. Hos-. pital early .this morning snf
. f ering from' a cerebral : hem-
' orrhage.? : :
- He is on the seriously ill list
and his condition at noon had
not changed much since he
wm admitted at about 7:30 a.-
- m. 'r -;. '-i.'. 5
- Crook Is a native of Yaiwo.
Misi-, and has been employed
with the canal organization
sine 1929. All of his service
was with the service centers
and the commissary division
and he has been director of
the Supply and Employe Serv Service
ice Service Bureaa since Its organisa
tioa last year. --.'.' .?.
If you're not one of these
groups, you may be in the coffee
group.
"This is composed of men who
mostly are merchants." Toby
says. "They go from plsce to
place In the business section for
coffee, over which they ezchsnge
news kerns and transact politics.
You find the ssme fellows at one
place at 7 a.m., another place at
9 a.m., and so on through 10, 2.
3 and 4. Some drink 15 to 18
cups a da. -
"And then there are the nick nicknames.
names. nicknames. We had Humpy Wade and
Turnbuckle Berry and Tighteye
Soeed. Tighteye had three broth brothers
ers brothers nsmed Goosegg, ROundhesd,
and Batsy.
"My real name is Telly Otto
Bruce, but Toby is the nickname
that stuck. I also was called Bag-

. .

aders

in his 'honor: Ml, to r.) seat

H jail Potter

ii S: '..'Ii
present,
scattered fund raising
drtves.-.' vt .', V -.
;.lhi-e- were number of Vevl, 1
fvenlt among them, the" 50th an
niversary party for' the Tivoli,
last November, and the passage of
the billionth ton of cargo through
the Canal Just a month later.
Other newsworthy items -of the
past year 'include Studies toward
increasing Canal capacity; the
placing of an. order for i revolu revolutionary
tionary revolutionary new .type of ,lockv locomo locomotive
tive locomotive to be tried out at 6 a tun;
sale oi tne Panama Line's SS Pa Panama
nama Panama to the American President
Lines,- a Congressional directive
ordering that the Panama Rail Railroad
road Railroad be retained as a (common
carrier here; transfer of :Commis.
sary Division hesdqusrtert to the
Pacific side snd the inauguration
of a Price Ihdex.. :!. i.

Girl : Admits Spending Night

Gl At CZ Gun Position

3 A 14-vear-old eirl who., said
she left her home in Panama to
go swimming in the Balboa pool
last Monday., mgnv cook tne
stand yesterday in the Balboa
Magistrate's Court to testify that
sne spent .mat mgni on a-mpire
Range win a young soiaier, ann
then returned the next t night
with him and one of his buddies.
The two soldiers, Robert' M.
Bridees and James. R. Aiken,
charged with statutory rape of
the' Amerlcan giri, eacn aecunea
to take the stand to testify on
their own -behalf. :
'Arter a one-hour hearing In
the court -yesterday. Judge John
E. Deming bound the cases over
for trial in the U-S. District Couit
and set baU at lfi0Q for each
defendant.' ? -.
- The dark-hslred girt who ap ap-oeared
oeared ap-oeared in court devoid of make
up, and .wearing a red sport
blouse and grey skirt, spoke qui quietly
etly quietly and without emotion. She
told the .court that she had ac accepted
cepted accepted a ride home with 20-year-
ears. Eaelebeak. and Little Britch
es. When I went back to Piggott
last summer, the whittlers snd
checker slayers and nicknames
were there, same as ever, and 1
suspect there is not another small
town in the U.SA. that preserves
them as faithfully." .
Toby now runs a small-appliance
store in. Kev West. na. tie s in
New York for the ooenini of "A
Face in the Crowd." a movie for
which he was technical adviser on
small town life. Whea the author
and tha director first asked him
to take them to aa Arkansas small
town in which they could shoot the
movie, be took them to riggoo.
Next morning be figured
he'd
done right. Both had got
knives

and joined the whittlers.

Appointment of a new manaqer for the Panama oU

road Division, and the consolidation of three of the rail railroad's
road's railroad's top jobs, was announced today at Balboa Heights".'
. The new manager, George M. Smith, formerly witrV
the Pennsylvania Railroad, arrived on the Isthmus Friday'
from 'Fort Wayne, Ind., and will return to the United
States tonight, after having spent the past few days int
specting railroad operations in the Zone.
Positions to be consolidated, in accordance with a
Congressional directive, ore those of superintendent of
the Railroad Division, master of transportation, and road-

mdster.
Smith is expected to return to
the Isthmus about June 15 to as
sume his new duties.
Canal authorities said ne wui
be responsible for implementing
the recommendations made sev several
eral several months ao by a congres
sional committee after hearings
were held here, and a survey was
made bv John T. Rldgely, who
later died in Gorgas hospital.
The consolidation of two of
the three Jobs to be eliminated
tr.it. of 4he present .rai.ii.sd s.
perintendent, Edward N. Btokes,
and master or transportauon,, j,
W. CfConnell will become effec effective
tive effective -upon the retirement of these
two men, slated for the near future.'.--
James A. Dorsey, Roadmaster,
will be transferred to another
position in the railroad organi organization.
zation. organization. Smith, the new railroad man manager
ager manager was assistant superinten superintendent
dent superintendent of transportation for the
Northwestern Region of the
Pennsylvania Railroad prior to
accepting the Canal position.
'A native of Petersburg, Va.,
Smith is a graduate in Civil En Engineering
gineering Engineering from Virginia" poly poly-tech
tech poly-tech Institute. He has been with
old Aiken, whom she called
"Junior." She said he started
speaklnsr to her while she was
si tuna in tne oieacners oi ine
pool, and then offered xier a ride
back to Panama City, where she
resides with her mother,
Instead of aolng home, she
said. Aiken drove the car to an
abandoned gun position aoout
live minutes away from tne Mi Mi-raflorea
raflorea Mi-raflorea bridge, known as Empire
Range. She admitted having sex
ual intercourse with him ana
spending the night there.'
The ease first was brought
to the attention of police by a
report by the mother that her
daughter was missing.. Tester Tester-day
day Tester-day the mother, took the
stand to confirm her daagh daagh-tor's
tor's daagh-tor's age. The girl is reported
to have aa American father.
The girl said the first Incident
took place Monday night, June
20. ana that on Tuesoay mgni
she went to the same location
with Aiken and his buddy, 19-
year-old Robert M. Bridges.
Both men are attached to the
20th Infantry at Fort Kobbe.
She admitted that she naa
been intimate with Bridges also.
She said the trio spent the night
at the range and returned come
on Wednesday.
Statement made by each of the
defendants were Introduced tn
court aa evidence, but were not
read openly. Neither of the two
soldiers took the stand, or ques questioned
tioned questioned any of the witnesses ap
pearing la court yeeteraay.
They told the Judge they had
bo witnesses to can. Both men
are In Jail la default of posting
tho balk .
Boat Road
rORT WORTH. Tex. (CP)
Boatmen rowing down a flood fa
street in Fort Worth Monday
spotted a sign that said they,
were narigaung River soao.

the Pennsylvania Railroad slncl

his graduation from college in
1B35. ;
... ; "" r ... ... t'-
His wife and their son ant
daughter will follow within', sev several
eral several weeks, after Smith return
rr: )
!'tt'"iVy ft -t
ft .. : '
iucc
WASHINGTON. May. TUP)
-Secretary of Treasury Georgi
M. Humphrey resigned today.
President Eisenhower nominat
ed Robert B. Anderson, formei
Secretary of Navy, as bla iuo
cessor. v VA'v-o
Humnhrv's reslenation win be
come effective at a date no latei
than the close of the curreni
Congressional session .. r-'..
Anderson's nomination wai
sent to the Senate at noon tor:
day for confirmation. ; 3 J
The White House also dlsclo
ed that Randolph Burgess, now
undersecretary of treasur)
would leave his present post ti
accent another novernment -apt
pointment. The White Hou$fc dej
clined to say what the newBurj
Humphrey's departure front
the government has been x
pected for some time.
He informed .. the .' jpresfdaal
that he had to give up oyrn
ment service aa a mattes., of
absolute necessity" because 01
the illness and recent rttlre rttlre-ment
ment rttlre-ment from business of ont of nil
iormer partners n ... ;.
The President-had knowwfot
two years that Humphrey .plan .planned
ned .planned to step out of the cabined
But the actual decision hadrbeed
postponed repeatedly. w;
, mm 4.
'To Honor Dead, E!
Respect Living; -rs :
Drivers Are Told H
CHICAGO, (UP) Death on
the highway awaits 120 persons
during the 30-hour Memorial
Day holiday, according to a
forecast today by the National
Safety Council.
-
Council president Ned H- Dear Dear-bora
bora Dear-bora said the1 anticipated toll
would be 45 higher than the av average
erage average of 75 traffic fatalities for
a non-holiday Thursday in May.
The holiday period la figured
from 6 p.m. today to nuamgut
tomorrow. :
Dearborn urged holiday driv drivers
ers drivers to "honor the dead by ttt
specting the Hying."
JUC IVIUItlil WI'WJ.
Inadvertent Clue 1
On Cost Of Arms ;
WASHINGTON, May 29 (LTV-
Republican Leader Joseph w.
Ma run, jr., Mass., wno
times gets ais ton rue twitiet.
csva the House today a poss es
clue oa why modern weopoca te
to nsach.
Reading from handwritten f
per. he inferred to them as S-
od saissilfs,

PAGE TWO

THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 195?

on Panamanians irum a wwuiuh :
f,,ri- w Yankee take on traitor Robert E. Lee, certainly is down

-
We admire the Colombians

for Canal rights. However, aisgrunuea wiouga we u
: lousy treatment from Panama's politicians, we retired V. S. citi citi-tejns
tejns citi-tejns love the country and the people and will fight, am to, arm

S The pollticos should get wise and authorize our commissary
.1a knonHoi nHviif-ires s we have our Congressmen who will

listen to our cry if it's loud enough and we are crying.
I As to CARE cheese and milk, the sales agents in the inte
1 i i i ..4 BAlantaB

i
I
PEN PALS
or-..
'After seeina vour address

Children's Corner of the South China Sunday Post-Heraia, j
eifer myself as a member of the Mail Box Club.
My name is Philip Lee. I am 18, studying in St. Louis Col
metM Fnrrri si

I have heard a lot about Panama with her famous Panama,
Cknal in my school text books. I am so curious and interested
tn the customs and the people there that I want to know more

KmhI Hw. -nvaxtixaiiv rnnr. in.

i-M- in tviat. pnnnt.rv. I even hone to visit Panama some

- J WU M

My general interests are reading, rowing, swimming, picnics,
irijrvies and correspondence. .-.
i I shall be very grateful if you will manage to print ray name

to the MaiTBox.
, I
J
I tKKiULt BLOW Tommy
riffed up this musical melUng
coded Irbea he found It was in

WASHINGTON (NEA) Central
Intelligence Agency is 10 years
old this fall. The past year has
been the busiest of its short ca
reer, due to the crises In Poland,
Hungary and the Middle East.
borne' harsh things have been
said about CIA in this period.
There have been congressional cri criticisms
ticisms criticisms on estimates of Soviet
bomber strength. President Eisen
hower, Secretary of State John
f oster Dimes and their top aides
have been reported without ad
vance reports on the British.
French and Israeli plan to attack
Egypt.
VIA Director Allen w. Dulles
is in the position of not being a-
ble to answer attacks on intelli
gence failures.
But the observation can be made
that even when intelligence esti estimates
mates estimates are available, the informa information
tion information in tnim may uov ue psa on
or impressed on officials most vi
tally concerned.
THIS HAS BEEN the great fail
ing ox u.a. intelligence wont ail
along. Accurate intelligence esti estimates
mates estimates were made before the Japs
struck feari Harbor. The informs
tion just wasnt properly evaluat
ed and passed on to the right peo
ple.
Similarly, u.s. intelligence fell
down wnea the Chinese Commu
nists struck south across the Yalu
ttiver in USA), lien. Walter Bedell
Smith, who took over as fourth
head of CIA in October of tha
year, ordered a complete over-
uaui of tne agency.
He was tough and ruthless a
bout it. He cleaned out many of
the extra hands hired in a hurry
at tne start oi the war. The rich
boys and girls who played at Intel
ligence tne Georgetown cocktail
set were let go. Tighter security
was imposed.
Then General Smith asked Allen
Dunes, who had headed a three'
nization of CIA, to come in for
man commission to study reorga
few weeks and put bis recommen
dauons into effect.
DULLES HAS BEEN at CIA ev
er since. He became General
Smith's deputy, then his succesor
in 1933.
In the past four years. CIA has
changed quite a lot. Its budget,
the number oi its employes and
their operations still remain se
cret.
cm it nss ouut up a career
service of intelligence experts
someunng tne united states has
never had before. Today CIA has
literally Hundreds of inteUisenca
ffice ie cover the ivastj: oviet
on ib toe cold war.
vouege graauaung classes are
now systematically combed each
June tor honor students in lan
guages. economics and science.
uut of every 1,000 applicants for
career jobs, only 80 pass the se
vere tests and training require
ments.
The pay is 13.000 for befinners
up to i4.uuv tor 35 top analysts
Director Dulles gets $21,000. It
isn't the pay that holds the "best
educated working force in Wash
ington" together.
IT'S THE INTEREST In tha
work. Dulles sets the naea hv
ucaiiy uvmg ni iob. seven days
and nights a week. He wouldn't
ao anything else If he could.
He has worked out a tooA r.la
tionship with Congress. The drive
ior a congressional watchdog com
mittee for CIA was killed 1 a a t
year. Dulles now clears his budg
et who me seven aenior mmiwr
of congressional aDDronriationa
committees, un top secret items,
the congressmen say, "Don't tell
us."
CIA after a atruffela rnt tA tnn.
lion dollars for its new headquar-
wra in ingiey, Va., a few miles
p the Potomac from Wsshigtoo.
This will replace the 88 buildings
CIA now occupies 11 of them
World War I and H temporaries.
So gradually, CIA is becoming
an established service. Its mem members
bers members now say that it is better than
British intelligence, which used to
be considered tops. CIA is also
said to be as good as the R u s s-sians.
sians. s-sians. I
ill
DATES BING Hollywood Is!
talking about tbo 4ataa Btagi
Crosby bad with Pet Sbeehaa, Sbeehaa,-abova,
abova, Sbeehaa,-abova, during bis recent visit :
Las Vegas, "laseperable is tb
"word lioUywoodens use for the
'craoocr and tbosTropicaoa.
.thomt gill, ,',

Walter Winchell

i.
THE BROADWAY LIGHTS
First Nights: "New Girl In
Town" and a reprise of "The Pa-
ema Game" were the week's on on-entries
entries on-entries the finals for the sea
son. .The critics fell madly in
love with the talented people in
both shows. ."New Giri." a mu
sical transplant of E n g e n e O'
Neill's "Anna Christie' attracted
robust handclapping at the pre premiere
miere premiere a good deal of the time.
For the specialists, not George Ab
bott's version of Mr. 0'Neil"i ve
ry sad saga, which dragged when
Gwen Verdon wasn't doing the en
tertaining along with Thelma Rit-
ter and some of the other caps-
cspables. .But the Bob Merrill
score has some agreeable songs.
especially "Look at 'Er-" end the
Robert Fosse choreography is vi
rile and good-looking w "Pajama
Game" at City Center delighted
the official appraisers, They ; gave
breezier notices to the revival
than they gave the newcomer. The
latter, however, has a hefty ad advance
vance advance sale. Meaning it will- be a-
round when the new season ar arrives.
rives. arrives. ."Long Day's Journey"
has distributed over $100,000 in
Srofits to investors since the Pu Pu-tzer
tzer Pu-tzer Prize play opened Nov. 5.
Biggest financial bit ever for Eu
gene O'Neill.
In The Vlrvgi The Lindy's
Round Table bunch sided with the
critics who were disappointed with
TVs version of The George M. Co-
ban Story. They enjoyed the play
ers but not the show. ."So
what?" sighed an ex comedian.
who has the scars to prove it,
It s too late for television to ruin
him." . .Simile by Alice Simms
As affected as a bit-player with
her first walk-on."
The Cinamaaiciant: Lauren Ba-
call and Gregory Peck glitter in
'Designing Woman," a jollypaloo-
za bright as Stardust Gay as
laughter. ."The Burglar" co-stars
Jayne Mansfield. ."This Coeld
Be The Night" has a Runyon-like
whimsy. The majority of review reviewers
ers reviewers found it an enjoyable show. .
The Garment Jungle" has realis
tic impact and a topical wallop.
."Untamed Youth," a rockn-
riot absurdity, is too noisy for
dozing. ."The Oklshonan" offers
better -th in-a vera ca frontier fa
ble. Joel McCrea is the granite-
tough hero, who turns to molass molasses
es molasses when Barbara Hale is around.
.Spencer Tracy and Katharine
Hepburn are givinf acting lessons
again tn The Desk Set.'1 and a-
muiiof romp. ."Kronos. a sci
ence-fiction film, takes you to an
other planet called Duuo.
SERVICE

SELLS
SHERWLN-WIUJAMS
PAINT

Virtually ci Stockade

t& ;

In
The Airistocratst The pith and
punch of a fine drama was
beautifully conveyed by ;' Kim
Stanley In "The Glass Wil I."
Miss Stanley makes an art of
underplaying. .Ed Wynn, on
of our now dramatic stars, turn turned
ed turned In another 'wynning perform performance
ance performance in "The Groat American
Hoax". .The mother of Betto
Davis was a witty, delightful
subject tor "Thie Is Your Lite."
Helped explain where the- star
gets all that sparkle. ,"M a s s-quorada
quorada s-quorada Party" is one of TV's
more amusing toys. .'."Father
Knows Bast" managos to' be
homespun without being hokey.
Thanks te sveh capablos as Rob Robert
ert Robert Young and Jane. Wyatt.
What's wrong with TV? Well,'
Gleason and Csesar mutt depart
whit ami aiiiih aurvlv.
EMiko Wallace and Jim Bishop
made a good pair. The" ejuoriae
were potent and the retort
made sense. .jan wanes, book
ed to sing en the Stove Allen
show heps back to Mexico te
fight e bull. Jan't a girl.
Stairway to the Stars: 20th Cen
tury-Fox execs report that Pat
Boone, whose first film is "Berna
dine," accomplished what stars
rarely achieve: Did every scene
in one take... Valerie Allen, who
plays Sinatra s sweetheart in "Jok
er Is Wild," is the daughter of for former
mer former Ziegfeld girl Valerie Raemier.
Paramount has buildup plans for
her. .Tony Bennett's Town and
Country Club booking makrs his
10th' Ann'y in show biz. One of
the deserving stars. . Diahann
Carroll's show-stopping at Blue
Angle makes this very early boos
ter very happy. .Sammy Davis,
Jr., started his csreer at the age
of 2Vt. His Dad and Uncle present presented
ed presented him as a midget to get around
child labor statutes. .Jerry Lew
is' latest Decca disc is With
These Hands." Another good song
by experts Abner Silver and Ben Benny
ny Benny DavU. .Eddie Miller's "Tal
ent Scout Musical" is at Stein-J
way Concert Hall on W. 57th. .
Movie mags sob that Carrol Bak
er endured poverty before her re
cent rocket to the stars. .Huh?
.Her first husband wss rich.
The Story-Tollers: The top theme
in U.S. News-World Report is the
inflation squeeze. In 1957, ssys the
magazine, we are spending at
times the rate of 1M7 and getting
less than twice as much in re
turn. Inflation always starts out
rooking like Easy Street and winds
up as The Road To Jluin. . But
QCALTTT

L 3w J

Neiv York

the news to burn you up snd knock
you cold is in the April 25 circular
mailed by the Dept. of ( Agricul
ture. The title; "The Gold and
Dollar Position of Foreign Buyers"
, . It discloses that foreign gov governments
ernments governments have banked their wealth
in U.S. banks. And accumulation
of get this I) 29 Billion 300 Mil
lion dollars. .And we still give
them foreign aid. .Reader's Di Digest
gest Digest has James Michener's memor memorable
able memorable rtport on the terror and cour courage
age courage of the Hungarian revolt. Tra Tragically,
gically, Tragically, people seem to be forget-;
ting what history will always re remember.
member. remember. Redbook adds to Yul
Brynner's Publicity with a niece
which reports his love for priva
cy. : . ,.
: Tht Press. Bext History itself
Js not above trual lakaa.f Ein.
I hewer, who did se much for the
national security is, now forced
to plead for defense! money. t
Defame economy Is always took
ish. .The biggest bargain Is
buying 'a gun you may never
havo te shoot. . Alger His'
now book (in his own defense)
alibis that he never passed se secret
cret secret papers te Rods. Ho admit admitted
ted admitted some government peoplo did.
We do not recall that Hiss ever
revealed their names, V -The A A-merican
merican A-merican Taxpayer is a remark remarkable
able remarkable tallow. Since World War
Two his dollar havo aided ev every
ery every nation in tho world includ including
ing including China and Russia. . .Else
Maxwell, mother of a ge-sklp
column, told Rom reporters she
"hates gossip". .Time's Peoplo
department quotes some of her
meows about former friend.
The Intelligentsia: Georce
Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess"
(which Goldwyn bought for $650. $650.-000)
000) $650.-000) had an ironic inaugural." The
show destined to become a lassic
was received with so-so reveiws.
Charles Addams' new book of
collected cartoons will be named
Night Crawlers." Due in the
Fall. .Barbara Barb,. his lawyer lawyer-wife
wife lawyer-wife (for a brief time), is keeping
her N.Y. law offices open. She
dwells in London with her hus husband,
band, husband, Lord Colyton.. .Jack' Ben Benny
ny Benny wants to play the Edw. G. Rob Robinson
inson Robinson role in "Middle of the Night"
in summer stock. His leading la lady
dy lady would be June Lockhart... .
Dennis King is being p a g e d to
take over Walter Pidseon'e star
'role in "The Happiest Millionaire''
wnen ne noudays. .Lord Burgess,
composer of "Jamaica Farewell,"
is akchelly first-named Irvia. .
Renata Tebaldi, the Met stsr, is
se dedicated to her art he shuns
beaus. "Men are distracting,'' she
says. "I love passionately on the!
stage, but at home I study to!
build up my repertoire. (Uh-huh)
. .On bis Wednesday eve pro-1
I gram Prof. Cugat ssid: "We will
now plsy 'Mslaguana' which is
I The Breeze .and I to you". ."An-
daracia." my dear professor, if
("The Breeze and I". .Author
i Somerset Maugham's secret for
remaining young at 83: "I bave
I never tired out my heart with
jlove affairs and I never put wa
ter la my whisky.
aa fatCch
bUTYW1
Cswtvm avfMws. eaauata

1 'f -t
, i

:iiiD.mYUAsni;:3To:j

L1erry
i WASHINGTON Most signifi
cant fact about the President s bat
tie of the budget is that he' is be
ing defeated by the two groups he
rescueQ.,,,;v.r.;,:J-,,,..-t,c;3;:.,,it,.t:-':
Last year when he was ponder
ing whether a heart attack and an
metis operation should bar him
irom running two groups were
loudest in demands that he make
the sacrifice. They were
l. uiq Guard Republicans who
knew they couldn't win without
ike. s
t.. Dusiness. which has re
ceived more tax concessions, more
heiplul ruling from regulatory
commissions than in any time in
twenty years.,:
Today, however, if s tho U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and the
National Asociation of M a n u u-facturors
facturors u-facturors which have kept up a
steady drumfire against the
budget. They began their cam campaign
paign campaign early. Not satisfied with'
record prorits, they decided that
a further tax eut was more im im-portent
portent im-portent than schools for their
children or the defense of the
nation; Bitterly disappointed at
tne Eisenhower ; buogot,' they
launched an economy drive the
like of which the country hasn't
soon since the 1930's.
The disgruntled Old Guard latch latched
ed latched on to this, big business support.
Ike could have stopped the econo
my lanaside by throwing the.full
wciSm i, nis popularity into the
oreacn when it first started. ; Rut
he hung back, didn't want to '"tan-
gie witn congress, ignored the ad
vice oi tne paiace guard that he
must have a showdown.
Meanwhile the Old Guard' un
urged Ike not to tangle with Con-
grhs. j.ne Kepublicau leaders who
come to see the President one a
week are Old Guarders: Senators
Anowianq f fjallfornia, Bridges
of New Hampshire, with Joe Msr Msr-tin
tin Msr-tin of Massachusetts. rharUw h.i.
leck of Indiana is a middle-of-the-roader.
The advice they gave him
against a vigorous showdown was
to their advantage. He took the
advice. ..
: ; THE OLD GUARD
. r NOW CONTROLS J a
Today, as pne result of taking
wieir aavice complete control of
tne nepunucan party has gon' e
back to the old guard. Control of
mo .r any was something they had
had for yearsr and they wanted it
uacs: again, iney lost it in 1956.
In 1952 thev didn't lnxe It Tn ,h.t
election, Modern Republicans had
to organize Citizens for .Eisenhow
er in order to circumvent the OW
v .-. i -i I ';4 ,''
i-xMtkt !, )MooVn'-RpubJi.;
cans .assumed control and en
the nlphf ho Iwori, Nov. the re re-ejected
ejected re-ejected President proudly an an-nounced
nounced an-nounced his intention te remake"
the Republican party in his own
Today, six months after that
tounamg victory, the Old Guard is
back in the saddle. Here is what
is happening; i ;-t
1. Ex-Speaker Joe Martin haa
privately predicted "there won't
be any Modern Republicans run running
ning running the 1958 election. Thev wnn't
Ibe able to wixi in the primaries."
2. Sen. Everett Dirksen af mi.
nois, an Old Guarder, has quietly
pledged enough senatorial votes
to make himself the Senate- GOP
leader when Bill Knowland goes
back to California. This is r what
Lyndon Johnson did among the
Democrats in 1952. The Democrats
didn't Particularly want Jnhnann
just as many Republicans don't
want Dirksen. However, when out
on the spot sintrly, and asked for
a vote, it's difficult to turn a fellow-Senator
down. Dirken is the
man who launched the Hate Dew
ey speech at Chicago Convention
in 1952.

: 3. Bill Knowland, who was n't
given a chance to win the G O P
nomination in 1960, now is given
a real chance. Vice President Nix Nixon,
on, Nixon, a converted Modern Republi.
can; was considered a sure bet.
Now it's about 50-50 between Old
Guard Knowland and New Guard
Nixoil. .., t j
This is how radically politira

has switched as a result of the
battle of the budget. i. t, .,
CAPITAL NEWS CAPSULES
A-bombs for Korea Venerable
President Syngman Rh'ee has kick

ed up. a terrific backstage battle
in Washington. He's finally con convinced
vinced convinced the United States to forget
about the armistice and send new

planes and weapons into S o u t b.
Korea, s., .on top -of that he's ar.
guing that his 20 South Koresn
Divisions should be given tactical
atomic weapons and guided mis missiles
siles missiles similar to those beina sent
to the two American divisions in
Korea. .The Pentagon ; is i flatlv
opposed.: It fears the Iinnrer1irt.
ble Rhee might -order bis army to
smash into North Korea' as soon'
as it gets atomic bombs.
Arab Monarcha Huddla rwvi
sion in the Arah urm-u u f,n..,in
fi F1"1 Uraq expressed the
King. Saud Saudi Ara
bia, during their huddle in Bagh Bagh-dad,
dad, Bagh-dad, that Egyptian Dictator Nas Nasser
ser Nasser must be clocked from taking
over the Whole Arab world.'Faisal
If convinced Nasser has become
so dependent on Russia that he is
little more than a Red puppet.
King Saud is determined, 'howev 'however,
er, 'however, to avoid an open break" with
Nasser. He kept reminding his fel fellow
low fellow monarch that the Arab world's
numberl-one enemy is still Israel,
I v; ......
Ike Frowns en Port
toW congresiopal leaders private privately
ly privately that if they reallv beii u 1.
conomy. they will let' him veto pet
projects in their home states. Ho'
wants the right to kill items in
the appropriations Mil n..-
.. ymi wuuia give ike
the power to turn down local pork

trial poduction for men th to
come. Party .Chief Khrushrhav
however, la cracking the whin nA
pressing ahead. Hii ttrestin i.
stake. His head would roll if the
plan flops. -:-"; w v-..-..:
Sour Taste in China Msa Tr.
tung, the boss of -Communist Chi-'
ua, naa maae two secret speech
es denouncing bureaucratic bung bungling
ling bungling inside Red China, Alarmed at at-the
the at-the mounting criticism of commu-'
nism uroughout China, Mao with
usual communist logic, blames th
unrest not on the defects oi Com
munism but on subordinates who :
aren't doing their jobs.
Air Traffic Jams Commrit
airlines bave reported so m a
near collisions with military planes
that CAA Administrator Jack Pla
has called on the Air Force to de
someunng aoout It. Pyle wanU ci-J
vilian jurisdiction over all air tr.f. :
fic includlnk the milit.rv
the Air Force claims it must hsve -complete
freedom of nevigsUon -to i'
guard the country aeainst ah at-
tack. Over 500 near, colUsiona
were reported last year and hnn.
dreds more went unreported, i
Arrival '-
Cristobal
................ .UIO 10
i 'e 17
....Juat 24

WEUNE.5DAX; MAI Z3, W

f ?
'' p

i f i

1

i4clilsW2ittsw

DURING HIS RECENT VISIT ta Havana, Panama engineer Tomas Guardia, Jr. (left, was -decorated
Ssritn the "Orden de Merfto Vial,'.' Cuba's medal, for outstanding contributions to the
field of highway and road construction. Guardia was honored for his work-as director of the
Darleo Subcommittee which Is studying the route for the American HWW-teW
Panama and. Colombia. Others receiving the decoration during the "Roads week celebration
are (left ,t right) -Charles Blckford, president of the Guatemala Road -Federation, Frank
MacGutaess of the 1 Jnternatloxial Road Federation; and Rep-. Robert H. Fallon of Maryland.

man control and use bis invent inventiveness
iveness inventiveness for his own good.

' From such 'a meeting,' which

presumably would include Soviet

thinkers if it followed the .blue

print of the atoms-for-peace con

ference. Strauss said he believes

a plan might emerge that wouM
keep man's moral standards

abreast or ahead of bis discover

ies in the physical universe.

He told the United Press he
hopes to get-to work .on his plan
in earnest this summer, but
doubts he ean do much before

Congress adjourns.
Asked about Eisenhower's reae

tlon to the proposal, Strauss said
the President has made no state statement
ment statement about it and "1 cant quote
him." However hei said he has
"takea up the idea with the Pres President
ident President and I am, hopeful that we
may be able .to make some pro

gress. vj,
He unvellved his proposal on the

NBC television program "Meet
the Press"1 when asked whether

mankind is now approaching a

State .where," even without a nu nuclear,
clear, nuclear, war, "we are making life

impossible for ourselves."

'There is some thine I think eaa

be done," Strauss replied earnest

ry." -it isni only atomic energy
and the development of science

in that area that poses a threat.

WC have urmedicine and biology,

and many otner things, equally

serious tn rests to tne welfare,
even the life of the human race.

It seems to me that just as the

great conference ia Geneva, in

the -summer of 53. on the peace

ful uses of atomic energy was so

successful, that we should now
call a conference la the human

ities... .V. K-

Dio's 'Add' Trial
Hails As Witnesses
Fear To Testify ;

NEW YORK; May. 29 (XJP) The
trial of John (Johnny Dio) iD i o o-ffimrdi.
ffimrdi. o-ffimrdi. charced with master-mind

to testify. :
' U.S. Attorney Paul W.Wmiams
moved for the adjournment, say saying
ing saying the government ;is "power "powerless"
less" "powerless" to prosecute Gioguardi and
three co-defendants at this time in
face of the "chaUengV of the i i-lent
lent i-lent witneses.:- ;';v" r.O"
Williams asked for an adjourn adjournment
ment adjournment rather than a dismissal, to
permit a grand jury to investigate
how, -when and by whom the, two
key witnesses, both serving fed federal'
eral' federal' prison terms, were intimidat
ed.V-i- ;-'v-The
balk of witnesses Golfolfo
Miranti and, Domenico Bando, al already
ready already convicted of conspiracy in
the acid attack, was disclosed by
Williams last Monday, f v
Both men' were subsequently re re-questioned
questioned re-questioned by tbe grand jury, and

increase last 1 year was considers
bly below .the record 1 peacetime
advance of $49,500,000,000 in, 1955.
It was somewhat lower than i the
average increases in !950-53.

The department's 'Office of Busi

ness Economics said the outstand outstanding
ing outstanding change last year was a six
bjllion dollar 'reduction in federal
indebtness to the public-The first
substantial reduction since 1948.'V
' "This liquidation released funds
which could be utilized to facili

tate last, year's large expansion
in private investment," the bureau
said in its monthly "survev of cur

rent business." t

The report showed that the net

increase in the debt of borrowers

other than the federal government
amounted to 34 billion dollars last

year, 'lhis included debt increases

of 317,500,000,000 by individuals,
more than 12 billion dollars by
corporations, : and $4,500,000,0 by
state and' local governments.

- Net new borrowings bv indivl.

duals last year were seven mil

lion dollars less than the record
rise in 1955. The bureau attributed
this chiefly to a reduction in au-

mo riai. xnenas of tbe accused
reportedly have collected at least
half the expected amount. H
Series Bonds
Soon To Be Issued ;
In Piinchcard;Form
Washington; May 39 (upl.
The Treasury -Deoartment.

nounced today that it will isue a
series "E savings bond in punch punch-card
card punch-card form beginning next Oct. j.
The Treasury said the change changeover
over changeover from' the present paper type
bonds will save $500,000 a rear in

printing- costs, bv oermittins' thm

use of electronic processing (ma-

Tbe aew punch -carl bonds win

be put in use the Treasury aakL

when present stocks of the paper

type E bond forma are depleted.

probably about the end of Septem-

'Teachers of Year
Will Call Tomorrow
Al While House
NEW YORK,: May 89 (UPJ--X
woman who teaches school in a
once condemned church in Inri.

pendence. Mo., and a man who
became a speech teacher to oveif
come his own shyness today were
named "Teachers of the Year"-by
McCall's magazine, s,
Guy BizzelL speech and EnplUh

techer at A. N. McCallum ; Hitfh

School, Austin, Tex., and Mrs. Ma

ry Field Schwars, third -; grade

teacher, were selected in the sixth
annual teaching contest sponsored
by McCall's and the U. S. Office
of Education. H-iv -, ,.: ,.'
The two teachers will be' pre presented
sented presented to President Eisenhower

the White House tomorrow,

wrs. aenwarz a member, of the
staff of the Bristol Sehnnl in in

dependence, is a housewife .and

mother of a 13-year old son. She
was praised for, making her-class-

room attractive and conducting a

wcuwKsuutwq program. 'fi i tt, i
BizzeJl was desoribed as iis.wone
of those rare persona whn nn.

tune, f : f ,i
. -'2 V1V..I k'
"Few people realize that 270
albums have been made so far
this year," he confided, ''and
more, than 1800 single records.
Out of all those platters may maybe
be maybe 20 or so will be hits, i

"With competition like that

you have cot to use every feim

mica m tne dook to maKe your

own records stand out. -,

"A vocalist has to play the disc

jockey circuit, visiting every Dig

city in tne country to plug his

songs, it helps If, you can -get

some t: controversy stirrea up a

bout a number, too." -,-

According to Wayne, who has

recorded about 100 songs. 20 Der

cent of the long-playing albums

are oougnt on tne basis or tne

album cover, i N

"It's like paper-bound hov hovels,"
els," hovels," Artie grinned. "They put
a sexy-looking dame on the
cover and it sells like French
postcards. "Half the time the
story has nothing to do with
the picture on the front of the
book." - --,--

: Artie, taking a note from pa paperback
perback paperback publishers,- has plaster plastered
ed plastered a racy photograph of voluptu voluptuous
ous voluptuous Anita Ekberg on his first al album,
bum, album, titled ''You're My Thrill."
'Ekberg has absolutely nothing
to do with the project she's not
even heard on the record.
' z
But a subtitle reads: "Sung for
Anita Ekberg by Artie Wayne'
Thus, Artie may he setting a
trend. It is possible to conceive
of an album appearing with pos

es of Marilyn --Monroe, Jayne
Mansfield and Marie Van Doren
titled "Songs for three blondes
by Joe Bolenbecker.''
Once the customer gets home
from the music store he can

frame the album jacket and

throw Bolenbecker and his mu

sical saw in the trash can.

"There are at least a couple
of hundred record companies
in business today, whereas five
or ten years ago there- were

less than a dozen," wayne
went on. v ; j. ..

"By the end of the 'year the

jocks will have received -more

than a thousand albums and
millions of single records. It's a

multi-million-dollar business and
growing all the time. ;V f

'"If pictures of, sexy glrls 'help

sell other products, there's n0

reason why they can't be used to

peddle recordings."

BUFFET DISHES

. ' and t
VEGETABLE DISHES

EXTRA LARGE
mercurial
Jewellers

STOCKHOLDERS OF CERVECERIA
'' ilACIOIIAL, S. A.
(NATIONAL BREWERY. INC.)
Tnit.la to remiritl you that, as per written notice
already mailed to you, the Extraordinary General
Assembly 6t. Stockholders called by the Board of
Director! for the purpose of amending the By-Laws
of the Company and adopting other necessary and
convenient measures, I will be held In our New Plant,
Translsthmlan- Highway, on Wadnesday May 29th.

:1?57 at 7 p.m.

.f Due to the Importance of the matters to be -disr:

iioussed atr.tbts i meeting, -yourK punctual mttendanp W"

. requested. 4 it tmanie to attend, we would appreciate

- your tending us your Proxy a soon t poslsble, be

i.. fore the date of the meetingl

THE SECRETARY.

' :for a perfect
& I mrpfrep vnmttnn e;

SJ v tjs w w van f ti

I planned to suit you -h

Panama Tours will make
all the arrangements
for you., .before you leave
Steamship rail or
Air Tickets
Hotel Reservations
Sight Seeing tours
AND
. All the Faculties of
American Express
Travel Service -EVERYWHERE
WRITE
VISIT
PHONE

Panama Tours

World Wide
'Travel.
' Service 1 w.

: '- Tlval! AtlU P.O. Box 1628 Tel. Z-200C 1 ?

SATINA CARRIES YOU SMOOTHLY

THRU THE IRONING HOUR!

Saiino;..

Ih 110 Inning

id in th tint box.

NOW
RODELAG,

Phones 3-6150 3-

on DISPLAY

s.

A.

At its new location San Gregorlo Building.
Ave. Justo Aroseinena.

Open all day Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only from 7 to 9 p.m. also.
ENGLISH CARS

Standard Jm o Jhhimph

FDUR DOOR station wagons

r il a

s "ssslsiaa- . v -,

-

UaiqutVtd Sudan
The large and eomfortable
feu dear automobile.
Reasonably priced. Up
to 15 miles per
. galloo. ;

FUND-RAISING DANCE FOR FOURTH OF JULY
WILL TAKE PLACE AT, LEGION CLUB TONIGHT
Sponsoring organisations are anticipating that s !arg
number will turn out lor the fund-raising dance which will
be held at the American Legion Club at Ft. Amador tonight.
Proceeds from the dance will be used to finance Fourth'
of July celebrations for the Pacific Slde.i
The American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Boy
Scouts' Girl Scouts, Boy's Staters, Girl's Staters and Pacific
Councils are some of the interested organizations.

Panamanian Ambassador
The Ambassador of Panama to
the Nationalist Government of the
Republic of China and .Consul
General of Panama in Hong
Kong, Mr. Angel ;Vega. .Mendea,
left Monday by plane forJHong
TCnni; to assume his official du
ties,
Panama Couple ---
Have Miami Visitor
Mr. John Whittier,Greenlcal ot
Miami was a guest of Mr, and
Mrs. C L. Lucas of El Cangrejo
for the first part of this week.
REGISTRATION FOR
TEENAGERS &

HOLLYWOOD. (UP) These
daya the trend is for the young,
curvy beauties of the screen to
give ud llDstlCK ana cleavage ior
neavy drama.
The world iirst witnessed ine
metamorohosls of Marilyn Mon
roe from nude calendars to the
actors' studio, Arthur Miller and
Sir Laurence Olivier. This
prompted- Shelley Winters, Terry
Moore and other movie queens to
head for Mew York acting cpach
The surprise switch of this sea
son is piper Laurie, formerly a
cute rednead who ate nowers
and played winsome maidens in
Dinging bodices in those swasn-1
buckling Tony Curtis movies.
When piper showed up on tel
eyision in dramatic roles this
past season. Holly woodites
gasped her name a they used
to gasp, JSonny Tufts? j
l Now four TV shows and an
MGM movie later, Miss Laurie
has become a top young actress
sne lust iinisned piaymg a
neutral -lpve-hungry wench in'
Sail." And the girl who used to
gobble gardenias is off to New
York' to null over Broadway of offers.
fers. offers.
"The girl who was created be because
cause because of that flower-eating stunt
wa eomebody I never knew.? pi piper
per piper said In attempting to explain
the change.'
"What I am now la what I hope
I wa all the time underneath."
Seeing Piper Is a surprise for
those who remember the flower-eater.
Sweater girls who
take up serious acting seldom
talk or look the same.
Piper's hair now Is dark brown,
long and pulled off her face In
Eva Marie Saint fashion. During
our interview she wore little
makeup, no jewelry and a simple
brown cardigan sweater. She
spoke haltingly,-earnestly.
"I signed with Universal when

DOROTrl Y CHASE
' ANNOUNCES
. Additional Registration for Summer classes
for all ages will be held
I MONDAY and TUESDAY
June 3rd and 4th from 3:15 to 5:30
. Previous students may register by phoning
2-4174 Thursday thru Sunday
thereafter Phone 2-175L

'41
Irr ve
I Pi years
GIVE A

(h.

KODAK PANAMA, LTD.
PANAMA e COLON

I 'Him 3 n t ..-J
'mii u '-' '" 1 - i n urn i iiiimiim

Bat

I was 17," she said, "I had plan-
ned to go to New York to study
but the contract was very ap appealing.
pealing. appealing. ; S
fl read in the columns one
day I ate flowers. I bad to go
through with that studio pub publicity.
licity. publicity. I was too terrified to say
ijv ; .:-(
T AAl a .viiv-Bmnaffa' Mtsna tier 9t
J. UiU Or UllllVlVf BVVill, s
tnf Ku f.Hu fast, tvia aa tppn-'
pictures with Tony Curtis. I be-
came disillusioned ana disap disappointed.
pointed. disappointed. :- 'fir
"After a whUe r didn't care. I
didn't work as hard as' I might
have. I was ashamed or what
did. I was lazy and confused."
i Piper's fine p e r f o rmance
brought '-her more ? good TV
scripts on "Front Row Center,"
"Playhouse 90" and "GE 'mea
ter."- -' .y't-'ft.
,l Now.'llke' many "reformed'
glamour girls, Piper has" moved
to New York to study acting, live
and work in TV and on 'the
stage except when a moVie comes
along.
3 Pulitzer Awards
Ga To Columbia U
Journalism Pupils
NEW YORK, May 29 (UP)-
Three Columbia University jour
nausm students today were
named winners of Pulitzer travel
ing, scholarships.
The awards, which provide $1,
500 to each student to finance
travel abroad, went to Ronald
Kriss, of Brooklyn: Helen Jean
Anderson, Raleicrh, N.C: and Her Herbert
bert Herbert Steirr, of Pittsburgh. All will
be- graduated next Tuesdsv from
the Graduate School of Journal
ism.
yMr graduate
of pleasure
KODAK CAMERA

J

' Miss Joan Deeenaar. an r honor
graduate of Balboa High School,
was awarded thd Elks Scholarship
of $1,500, a 4-year scholarship to a
college in the U.S. Joan will attend
the Woman's College of the Uni
versity oi worth Carolina in
ureensboro, N.C.
Another Elks Scholarship T e.c 1
pient was Miss June Barlow, who
was awarded tne S5UO scbolorshin
to the Canal Zone Junior Colleee.
iviios egenaar is tne aaugnter
oi mis. Jessie ueeenaar. an em
ploye of the P 1 a n t Accounting
ce, and. Miss Barlow is the daugh
ter ot Mrs." &mma Barlow, an em
ploye of the Personnel Bureau
, Each notice for Indution in this
column should b submitted m
type-written form and mailed eo
the bos number listed daily m 'So 'Social
cial 'Social and Otherwise," or delivered
fev hand to -the office. Notice ot
meeting cannot b accepted b
Jelephona, j: ,r vi;,l "'
DAR Executive Board
To Met On Freiday
The Executive Board of the Pa
nama Canal Chapter, National So
ciety, iaugniers ot tne American
Revolution, will meet Friday at
4:i3 p.m. m the lattle Gallery
the Tivoli Guest House.'
Reliance Camera
Club Meets
of
.
lOniOhT
I The Reliance Camera 1 Club will
meet tonight at 7:30 at Dunn's
Barbershop Panama City.
Large Group Turn
Out FojvFinali ;i
Talehf Conlesl
i Anpthe large2 group xl contest
ants appeared on the- Cafe E E-ouire
ouire E-ouire talent quest contest Satur Saturday
day Saturday preparatory to th final that
will be held at the Atlantico Thea
ter on June 8 at Wpja.t .'
Qualifying .this week were
George (Sonnyboy)' Goededared
CAMA..M1 T ITfl...!.
were added to the long list of eKei-
bles who will vie for-a spot on Orcil
lo's Cuatro s Junev17 Show at the
Colon Arena.' The winners In both
the solo and groun categories will
be presented to the general pub
lic on mat annual snow. ..
At the theater on June' 8. there
will $be a movie entitled "NojWay
Out" plus a (30 Wahoo. Gldstono
Goredon and his saxonhonSe an
balypsa sincer Sir Panama, will
also be on the show
Acc$omoaniment' for the contest'
ants will be furnished by Reginald
f Bi Bay) Nicely and hU Esquire
KocKers, comnrisea 01 Nisceiy on
tenor Willie Rilev on trum trumpet.
pet. trumpet. Ovid Laurie on piano. Arthur
(Turner on baM. Teroy Sealey on
drums and Wilfredo Ingram do
ing the vocals..
John Williams
Obsequies Set
ForTombrrow
Funeral services will be held
tomorrow afternoon at 4 o.m.
in the Calvary Baptist' Church
for tne late jonn A. wuuams,
who died In Santo Tomas Hospi Hospital
tal Hospital last Saturday., .
. Burial will follow in the Herre Herre-ra
ra Herre-ra Cemetery. ; '
His wife. Mrs. Iris Mulr Wil
liams, amved vy air wis morn morning
ing morning from New York, where she
naa been a resident ior several
months. Mr. Williams was to
have Joined his wife In New
York, but became ill and bad to
be hospitalized. He was recuper recuperating
ating recuperating from his Illness, when he
again collapsed and was taken to
the hospital where he died Sat Saturday.
urday. Saturday. .;'-
A Jamaican, Mr. Williams op operated
erated operated a tailoring establishment
on Army posts in tne canal zone
ior several years.
W(WSOf
BONED CHICKEN
: AR meat, ready te eol.lel
ejeje erf eionv fine fiweeeoe)
' foeeU Ye kmw they're good
become teyre etaee by de
kokeft of CampbeA'i Sovpe.
iook for SY7AKSCJ
touu pindCUAUTT

Cheerfulness Is f.lore

Contagious Than Cc!d

DAY in and day out. vear In and
!year out, if vou are a homemaker
tnere is one thing you owe your
luumy. ii is a cneertui, iight-neart-ed
attitude towaro living
No matter how hard you work,
or how much good you try to do,
or how wiJiin? you are to sacrifice
for your family, you can't make a
nappy home unless you are hap happy
py happy yourself .nd cheerful enough in
jruur manner to mase your content contentment
ment contentment catching.
A dissatisfied woman, a quar
relsome woman, a womsn who
nurses grudges, one who enjoys
talking about sorrow, a female
martyr none of these can make
a nappy nome.
For no matter how much she
does for her family or how often
she. reminds them of what she do do-es.N
es.N do-es.N she creates a eloomv itmi.
phere that makes, her h'o m e a
cneeriess place.
SUBSTITUTE A SMILE FOR A
FROWN, ,
SO what if your husband is wor-
By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE
CLEANING the Kara go is Ted's
Saturday morning chore. 1
One- morning he'd started : to
sweep when his friend Rocky burst
in on him. Breathless, Rocky easp-
ea, "Yuppie my dog s had the
puppies u.. tout" of them ... tome
.. .' :. -,..! -i. ''ftT-.,'...-; I
- Ted drooped his broom. In tbe
nouse his motner, almost as pleas
ed as he wa&. reminded him:
"Don't handle them,, darling --remember
how neW they art' Just
then his father came lift from the
cellar with the lamp he'd been
"Where you- off to?" e asked
his :san.?-. ; "Ti J r I -v;
He didn't respond to Ted's news
as his wue had. lie said, '1 tninK
you d better fmish the garage job
before visiting Kocky's puppies.
TED'S molher said, ;"Oh, Jim,
j. .,1,1 i i i
US S11II Pressing
For Sino-Red Feds 1
On 459 licrc: FOVs
; WASHINGTON, 'Mat', 29 (tJP)-
The government Teportea tauure
IQOiy iO us long eiion 10, gcv uib
Chinese- Communists to account
for 456 f American Korean- war
prisoners and said the men must
be presumed dead." V
r But spokesmen for the Defense
and State Departments assured a
House Foreign Affairs subcommit subcommittee
tee subcommittee that they wUl continue to press
the Reds for an ) accounting in
hopes that some of the GI's may
still be alive. '-..-" ': ,'".-.'
. Assistant Secretary of state
Walter S. Robertson emphasized
that "there isn't any evidence that
any of them are alive.
' Stephen S. Jackson, deputy as
sistant secretary of defense, a
greed. .While it is possible some of
tne men are alive, he. said, the De Defense
fense Defense Department has no "positive
information or intelligence from a-
ny source that such is the esse.'
. The subcommittee beard U. A-
lexis Johnson, U..S. ambassador
to Czechoslovakia and chief U. S,
negotiator tor the return or ac
counting of the missing men.
When a proud parent or grand
parent brings out baby pictures,
you cant be too enthusiastic In
your compliments. You can get
by with "Mr. that's a nice baby."
But your response will be much
more satisfactory 11 you remanc
mat the baby nas "your-aose- or
"your eyes" or "your mouth."
Or yoa can always aotice a
strong, family resemblance,

a nappier person until she learns
to be happy, herself, and to spread ,-cheerfulness..
cheerfulness.. ,-cheerfulness.. Cheerfulness ii

to spread. In fact, it's mora catch
uig thaa the, common cold. ,

the child has been .waiting weeks
for these puppies to get born!"
With pleasant but firm finality1
Ted's father said, "Then he can-;
survive waiting another 10 minute t'
and fmish the job be. has start, i
ed;'?,Hs.i: x ??
v As we can see,; Ted's parent!
loved him differently. Where his
mother'f love was unconditional,
regardless of whether he finished
his chore or Jeft it undone to vis- i'
it the ouDDies. hie fethAr'. it.'. 1

demanded respect for his obUga
tion. It balanced his mother'.

ceptance Of his ehildiah imnni.

with the demand that the control

It S a terribly imrtftrl.hf tnva m ;

Ted,, It interprets. the;, world Ao ':'
him. and prepares, him- to live in
it. As his mother's love has
strengthened him to meet the de demands
mands demands of his father's lam in hi 1-

father's love now is what strength- Y

euuiji nun to meet tne world s de- -mands."
' ... .4.,

WITHOUT fatbere' We tome
demands that reveal children's

moral powers to them, home ran :

remain nurseries. That Js why all
the v phlldv guidance profession
have now joined in tbe cry, ,"Re--store
father his place as head of

tne lamuyi"
High time tbo.fTheIr; tec e ft i
theory of total J'neinusKivenMn'

was a feminina-theory. Jt's what
has enabled mothers to queen it
over fathers as the suoremelv im.

portant person to their children.
It's what hat allowed them tq ex-
tend Overindulgence beyond : the
nursery where It belonas and aun.

in a six-sesion oecune. i-.
Measured by the averages; the ..
sesion went down on -the minus
side with industrials off 1.4 joints
at 497.72, rails up .OS at 145.10, -utilities
off .16 at 74.0 and the v

stock! off at 174.02. :.
These final loses were less
than half tbe declines at the mid-.
season lows when r the industrial 4
average reached, bak'-to, Feb. c -r
levels.
Market men said the move was
to be expected after the recent.,
consuaauon. anon covering r ana
evening up before the Memorial
Day holiday which will be as un unofficial
official unofficial long weakened for many is

the streetplayed a part. . ..
. Trading was light throughout
the sesion, totaling 2,070,000 com

pared, with 2,290,000 shares. Monr
day. ; :- .
Du Pont, off more than X points
at- its km; recoverd all bu ; -point
Bethlehem Steel and U. S.
Steel both pared early declines of.
around a point to small frictions.
Jersey Standard and Texss Co.
came up from their lows to dose

erwi&e
- idoniinu'J
an emergency trip to Texas, told
Lof visiting the Texas state eaer
ation kqck now in Ma? Anionio
After four hours and some pur
chases, she had seen a great deal,
but nowhere near all there was
to see: She had several specimens
on display that she had bought at
the show. -
This was the last meeting for
Mr. Umberger as he is leaving
shortly for his new asignment.
The group wished him good rock
hunting wherever he may be.
Berenice Vercelli
Gives Concert Tl --' ;
At USO-JWB Tonight ,,
The USO-JWB Armed Force
Service Center presents 9 concert
tonight, by the Argentinian, Bere Berenice
nice Berenice Vercelli. The concert begins
at 8 p.m. -
Miss Vercelli began1 her formal
study of the piano at the age of
three and received her professor professorship
ship professorship at-the age of eight. Her for formidable
midable formidable technique and great capa capacity
city capacity for interpretation have been
highly praised by critics. The pro program
gram program for the concert is as f 0 1 -lows:
. -t
Andante With Variations, Haydn
Sonata Op. 34, Haydn; Serenade,
Schubert; S e u t e Bergamasque,
Prelude, Minuet. Clare de Lune
Pasepied; by Debussy and Rhap Rhapsody
sody Rhapsody in Blue.' Gershwin. La Danza
Negra, Ascher; .and Waltz No. 1
Op. 34, Chopin,".'. t ,4
There "is no admission charge
for servicemen. The cost for
adults' is $1,000 for students SO
cents,r,'if:Sik-'W V pt-::?:M
Harnett And Dunn .'.
Jamboree At Tivolh v- i 1
The Jamboree for the; Harnett
and Dunn students from Balboa,
was held last Friday night at the
Tivoli Hotel. '
One of the featured dances of
the evening was the Turkey Trot
(a .very popular fox-trot many
years ago. it was amusing to see
how the "younger fry" did this
popular dance -of yesteryear. Va Valerie
lerie Valerie Spencer and Buttons Star-
kenburg won the rpize for being
the best "trotters,"
In the other competitive dances
the Fox -trot was won by Robert
Chandler and Virginia, Mauldin;
Patsy Plateau and- Thomas Shep
pard took the honors for the Be
ginners JJop ; -juonna rrasavage
and James Marshall won tne in intermediate
termediate intermediate 'Bop"; Valerie Spen
cer and Tommy Starkenburg shar
ed honors for the best in the Vien
nesa Waltz and Barbara 'Do m
browsky with her partner Buttons
Starkenburg were chosen as the
best all round in the Latin Ameri
can dances. n j 1
The Judges were: Miss BItsy
Frensley. Miss Wilms Hidalgo. Mr,
Fred Jenkins and t Benjamw. Ar
nold. Besides the competition dane
ing there were party games, 1 a
show and a buf eft" The s enter
hostesses who assisted Miss Har
nett were: Mrs. Kinllng. Mrs,
Jenkins, Mrs. Mann and Mrs.
By OSWALD IACOBY :
Written for NEA Service
NORTH U
4k9S8
QIM9IT4
Noaa-.
BAST
AJ9T94
r
xqrt
W1094
7X
AKS
t
KQT
BOOTH
. wAKQ
Zj10M3433
No m Vttloerabta
" Karth
nmihla Paaa Pass
BflJ. Paa Pass Pass.
. A Opening lead 4 K
TAKE a look at tha West Band
only. You are surely going to
double south s opening hid ot ove
clubs and are going to really wel
come his redoume.
Now you open the lung of dia
monds and South trumps and lays
dawn the jack of clubs. Make up
your mma as 10 your piay now
and then look at the rest of the
hands.
West chose to go up with the
queen. sst wss torcea m over overtake
take overtake with his singleton ace where whereupon
upon whereupon South romped home with his
redoubled contract
Needless to ssy, this hand ceas
ed considerable discusion when it
wss played recently la Wausau,
Wis., and while most people a a-greed
greed a-greed that Wert's play was cor correct
rect correct but unfortunate, I feel that
West made a mistake.
South suretv held an eient or
sine card so. for his five club bid.
Probably a nine card suit when he
redoubled. If this nine card suit
were beaded by the ace. South
would surely have played tie ace
in hope of picking up a singleton
honor is the East band. H e n e
West should have viauaUW the ac actual
tual actual Jack high club suit that South
heJd and ducked the trick. j
Another point of interest is that
if South held something li keA J
lOtxxaxxof clubs and did
choose to lead low be would prob-j
ably have played the nine tpotnot
the-jack. Similarly his choice of
the jack from hts actual bold in
wss deifned to get West to rise if
be held t.s exact combination of
cards. I

4

INSTALLED WORTHY ADVISOR w Miss Linda Jacobs shown
following her installation as Worthy Advisor ot PedTo Miguel
Assembly No. 8 Order of Rainbow for Girls. The ceremony,
took place Saturday at the Ancon Masonic Temple.. -With her
is Joe Galloway, the newly elected Rainbow Sweetheart of
1 Pedro Miguel Assembly:

Girl Staters Speak

By SHEILA PARBMAN
Among the many events at the
1957 session of Caribbean Girls'
State; which was held at the Fort
Clayton Hospital, was the passing
of bills in Congress. One bill pro proposed
posed proposed that each Girl Stater write
a paragraph about iwnat sne
thought was the outstanding fea feature
ture feature at Girls' State, I am sorry
that r ail the wonderful comments
cannot be printed, but let us lis listen
ten listen to some the Girl Staters
speak:
"One of the most interesting
vents at Girls' State : was our
mock trial which was supervised
by- Rowland K. Hazard, C a n a 1
Zone district attorney; Being a ju jurist
rist jurist brought, a grest deal of ex excitement
citement excitement to Bis, 'r Helen Ad Adams.
ams. Adams. ( 3 r
f After attending: Girls State, I
fnow have- a broader concept of
how my government functions.
This was a priceless experience in
which every girl should feel hon honored
ored honored and privileged r to partici
pate. .' Grace Argo.
"From attending this year's ses session
sion session of Girls' State. I have learn
ed to appreciate my American ci
tizenship and to try with all my
heart to help our .government in
every way possible. V Janet Ar
gue. ,
"Some of the outstanding fea
tures of Caribbean Girls'. State
were the learning and application
in our American way of life and
government. We learned the du
ties, responsibilities, and workings
of city, district, and state govern
mentsi and their officers. . .'
Stephanie Beck. .
'Of the many tnlngs I learned
at Girls'. State one is most out
standing.' It 1s how to make
friends. Caribbean Girls' State is
a wonderful way to teach girls the
fundamentals of our g 0 v e r n
ment. . Maxine Conover. ,
The thing that meant the most
to me was the companionship.
Working .and living together in
such close confines makes it al almost
most almost imperative for everyone to
get along. Girls' State -will always
be an unforgettable experience.
Joan DimofL
r "The cofn petition In the oyents
at Girls'. Stat ave im m feel
ing ef self-cenfideiK, Everyen
received recognition in seme
way which reinforced the Amr Amr-ican
ican Amr-ican principle 'All men are cre created
ated created equal. Unda Cunnint
ham.' .-'
"I learned that voting Is a Pri
vilege which should never be tak
en lightly, because the voter's and
the country's interests are at
stoke. .' Alicia A. Donahue.
'As far as I feeL personally, the
mam event -at Girls' State was
the night I received the Americsn-
um award. I couldn't have felt
prouder if I had been elected gov
Showing M Your Serrct
BALBOA 6:15-8:20
Air-Condltioned,
Also Bhowing Thursday
PARAISO :1S 7:55
TEXANS NEVTTt CRT
Terila of Tb Wilds
SANTA CRUZ gflS 7:51
"C,?t Dst In The Meraing'
THE AMERICANO"

. jpai WT
UL'.'CASTa CLTriS
mm
latrt ( a
ONsaviZSeOPf: CahvfcaSwUM

ernor of Girls' State, i Jackie

Dunn.
'"Choosing from a full schedule,
the visit to the Balboa Magistrate
Court was most interesting. There
we learned why certain laws are
made, and how w are protected
We also saw a series of b rake
tests. ." Helen Fusselman.
"Ater the state elections, we
held separate sessions of both
houses of Congress in which we
passed bills for the betterment of
our community jn tne tanai zone
Actually tJoing the constructing
snd passing of bills msde Con
gress more outstanding in my
mind. RocheUe Head.
"I met so many kids that
never knew before,: and the one I
thought I knew were quite differ different.
ent. different. When one lives with the same
people for a week, she really
gets to know them, wel..." Car-
lotte ,Herr t-v x ''r
'Te me tha meet Important
and enjeyable phase of Girls'
Stat was the passing of the
bills. We not only learned how
bills are pesaed in the- state Uf
islature, but w were also plan
nirw thinoa so, that Girls' State
will e e n 1 1 n w e throughout the
veer. . Sue Mable.
"I beUeve GirU' State is a gold
en opportunity for meeting new
friends and learning about your
old friends, k ." Lynn parsons.
"The outstanding feature to me
was the passing of the bills in the
Senate and the House. We actual
ly went through the whole proce
dure which was botn very educa educational
tional educational and Interesting. ." Sarah
Purdy.
"One of tha Highlights of Girls'
State was tne mock trial whivh
was interesting, informative. and
amusing. The actual experience of
having to state a case and prove
one's point gsve the participants
a chance td show their ability and
leadership in action, L 7 a n
Raymond. -. -..1 -.
"I like the housemothers, be because
cause because they did a terrific job of
maintaining order; yet they were
a friend to alL They had alee
word for everybody and at times
they joked with us. Fairlee
Skinner. ' "-"
"The highlight of Girls' State
was the shirt sleeve conference,
because the teen-agers really had
the chance to express themselves
seriously. It showed that teen-ag
ers csn express themselves seri
ously. It. snowed tnat teen agers
can express themselves when giv given
en given the opportunity,. M a r y, L.
Smith.
"Girls' State It wonderful ap-
portunity not only to learn about
one's government, but to get a so social
cial social education, as well. One -gets
sn outlook on many different -qualities
and characters of people. ."
Janet Tribe. : r ; . ; ;
"Girls' State gave me the-esf
Center Thtatns Tonight
DIABLO HTS. 1:M
Jody Lawrence
"THE SCARLET HOUR
Thursday "Walt Til Th
NSua Shines, Nellie"
GAMBOA 7:0
THK STEEL JUNGLE ;
Friday "Scarlet Hour
MARGARITA C:15 7:U
Brian Donlevy
"Tha Creeping Unknown-.'"
Tbarsday "Jort Per Ton"
CRISTOBAL 7:6 .
Air-Conditioned ; :
Jack Palancc. i
"ATTACK"
Also Showing Thursday!'
LA BOCA 7:M
WUllam Holden
PROUD and PROPANE
CAMP BILRD :15 7:M
"Saddles and Sa retrain"
"Perils of Tbe Wilderpes"

1 ifa

mm

worn

M6YIK

TV

by Erskin Johnson

HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Notable
Quotables; Elvis rresley, auout
mjtTiage: "It's normal to happen
sometime, t but I've got noming
like that in mind now. I've found
that my own interest in. certain
stars dropped when I learned they
were married and had children."
Anna Maria Alberghetti, 21 in
Mays "It is a -wonderful feeling
to know that H I should want to,
I could quit working right new
and live comfortably the rest of
my life." , i j ( ;
Robert Stack, an Oscar race
loser: "I received so many won
derful calls : of condolence, 1
thought I had won." t .r,
. Anthony Quinn, Oscar winner:
"I'm am actor by profession not
a movie stsr," .'
: Sid Caenari "When mv diuehter
Shelley started going- to school.
she sat at breakfast one day star staring
ing staring at me, and not saying much.
Finally she could no longer y con
tain herself and she blurted out:.
" 'Are you the Sid Caesar on
television?' ,"
JAYNI MEADOWS, about ap
pearing on TV's "I've Got a. Se Secret":
cret": Secret": "I get -to the studio about
9:15 p.m. and leave at 10:15.
Sometimes Steve (hubby Steve
Allen) doesn't even know -1 left
the house." t
Solly Martino, studio prop man
Orson Welles kept on the run
during filming of "Bad of Evil,"
which Orson directed:
"Everyone else was afraid of
Orson. Not me. I get him exsct exsct-.
. exsct-. ly where he wonted me."
Marguerite Chapman, who re recently
cently recently joined Dorothy M alone in
becoming a blonde: "My person
auty 'got too dark,, so 1 decided
needed some enlightening."
John Wayne, stsr .- producer of
continued work in the film after
breaking a bone in his foot on lo
cstion: "It's costing me $32,000 a
day to make this film, whether
we work or not, 'and a little pain
j ...........
aoein i poiner ue as m u c n as
tnat kind of money does."
George Gobel, remembering the
urst ume nis name appeared in a
newspaper to Hollywood; : "! be
lieve I was reported seen shop
lifting. I guess this wss written to
make me feel wanted, Well. I
was.'' 1
pert unity to spend -my Easter
vacation in a very neyoblo and
profitable way. I knew t h a t I
will remember the one week at
Girls' State all the rest of 4. my
life. ."Mary Wickman.
Tha part of Girls' at that
I will probably remember the
longest wss the mock triaL Be Because
cause Because I am interested in law, I
was especially nappy to be chosen
a.1 ....... .
mm uie nftiema pniinajti. . f ar
line Zirkman.
"I. who have lived In Panama
most of my life, enjoyed thorouah-
ly learning about tne American
government. I learned that real
sincerity is the power behind
gsins. I never received so many
thrills snd honors' as I did at
Girls' State, especially when L re
ceived the "Most Co-operative ci citizen",
tizen", citizen", award. I would like to
thank the girls whe helped me in
allowing you to near Girls' stat staters
ers staters speak. ,.,,; ;. v
Today Encanto .35, .20
DOU1XI Sa CmZMASCOPIl
Karlon Brando Glann yard ta
TEAHOUU Or THE AUGUST
j MOON"
Jannlfar Jonaa In
SAurrn c wtmtolk mnr
Today IDEAL 20 .10
SPANISH DOUBLEI
Pedro Infante In
fPaeble, Canto y Eaperansa"
, Kesortes Lllla Prado in
"RUMBA CALIENTE"
7.-00 TODAY! 9.40
POPULAK NTGHTt :
l.ll per CABt
Dana Andrews In
"WHILE THE CITY
SLEEPS" :v
Tomorrowl
GEORGE SANDERS
Yvonne De Carta la
'LOYE OF A
- SCOUNDREL"
I
CAPITOLIO
15c Me
-,
TEE LEATHER
. SAINT
. Also :
Tbe' Mas Whe Kaw
Toe Maca
Z5c

m

ml

RADIO
JAMES MacARTHUR, 18 year year-old
old year-old son of 'Helen Hayes; about
"The Young Stranger," his star starring
ring starring movie made in Hollywood
last summer; j '' J' :
"It's the best summer job I've
had yet. Summer, before last I
worked in an auto parking lot"
Glenn Ford, about a wester
movie,: "3:10 to Yuma," which he
completed recently: VLookmg for
a different western? Man, is this
one different! Fifty per cnet of
the action takes place in a 10-by-15-foot
hotel room., Van Helf in
has to hide me out until I can
board a train and. that's. half of
me picture, -how .duterent can
Hollywood, get a western in' a ho hotel
tel hotel room)-" - lfl II
N. RICKARD NASH,, the play playwright,
wright, playwright, about meeting Katharine
Hepburn for the first time on-the
set of "The Rainmaker": 1
"I was terrified. Wo were dis dis-cusing
cusing dis-cusing the script end I y was
more or less talkinq In polite
circles. Then she said something
that irritated me and J blew
up. I suddenly found myself
waving my arms and roaring at
her.. She ust listened coolly and
then said, 'Good. Sit down. Now
we understand one anothar.. Now
we can talk.', "-. .
Paul Douglas, about mixing mo movie
vie movie and stage roles: ."You have to
find out where you stand.: In Hol Hollywood
lywood Hollywood I'm always on the verge of
getting fat mentally and physically."

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP,) A
mass federal contempt trial of
John Kasper and 16 other per persons
sons persons charged 1 with interfering
with racial integration of .the
Clinton, Tenn., high school will
be held July 8.
:'tf.S. District Judge Robert t.'
Taylor set the trial date Monday,
denying a demand by Kasper,
White 5 Citizens council leader
who represented himself In ab absence
sence absence of his attorney, for an "im "immediate
mediate "immediate trial,: preferably tomor tomorrow."
row." tomorrow." The trial was postponed last
January by agreement of govern government
ment government and defense attorneys. Ras Rasper's
per's Rasper's name was added to the list
of defendants later.
Attorneys for. the 56 other defendants,"-
all Anderson County
residents, did not press for an
earlier trial date, r
Robert L. Dobbs of Memphis
said it would "suit me personal personally"
ly" personally" to have: the case tried some
J0 days hence" because of a wedding-
anniversary.
Kasper attired in a gray suit
and black tie; contended that
Lecture .On Islam
On- YMCA Program
Thursday Evening
The: Balboa YMCA will present
the fourt in the series of lectures
on The World's Great Religions to tomorrow
morrow tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. o
The subject will be "Islam" and
the lecture will be -given by the
Rev. Oscar W, Olsen, pastor of
Balboa Union Church. This is the
story of the religion founded by
Mohammed.
There will be colored slides to
illustrate th electure, and it will
be open free.
so

is blended

and masfaf
to war testa
BIEeW

1.

SfESTLE'8 GOOD THI2fS

mm

RIO

lit.
Goli lrfw (5M.H
BECAUSE TOU
- ARE MINE f
Also:
THE WILD NORTH

other federal court cases on th
docket should be "moved back" .'
to give his case "precedent."
The 17 will be tried together
on charges of criminal contempt
of a federal court injunction pro
hlblting- interference with order-..,
ly Integration of 'Clinton High
SchooL. ,

(Qurs Slloae in (Panama
Classic style Pullovers and Cardigans... "'
separate or In matching colors... 1 And
. what an array of most exquisite colors
including black' and e
white, of course.
; i-!?. l : V::f
100 pure Cashemere,
lifetima moth proofed I
v;? j
. i J
i )
It's not only the name
It's the soft, soft touch
that tells you, it's a
S

NEW YORK, May 2SH-UP)
Satchel Paige, wno wanw nuw nuw-'
' nuw-' inn. tn Hn with time, is still dem
nnst.rfttlnir the finer points of
pitching to the youngsters in the
International League.
Listed in the record books as
48, Paige came through with an another
other another fine relief performance
last night as Miami edged Hava Havana,
na, Havana, 5-4, In 10 innings. Bob Mice-
Speedboats Ready
i
;For Tomorrow's
Atlantic Regatta
.1
By TREVOR SIMONS
The familiar roar from the mo
tors of the manv speed -.boats be
ing readied at the P.C. Yacht
C&b for tomorrow's Memorial Day
races on the Atlantic bide, indi indicates
cates indicates the hieh Ditch of enthusiasm
that shows promises of some of
the best races ever held since the
annual May 30 events were begun.
;Some of the top drivers on the
Jslhmus have had their boats in
ithe water for the past week, sharp sharpening
ening sharpening up their charges with their
'tights set on the beautiful trophies
being offered by Mobil Oil and
Smoot Hunnicutt, sponsors of the
1957 races.
Dwey Harris and Dave Hinds,
two of the top boosters for the ev event,
ent, event, and both strong contenders in
their respective classes, have be being
ing being going through daily trials and
should have their boats, in top con condition
dition condition when the regatta begins to tomorrow
morrow tomorrow afternoon at one. i
The Eggers, familiar names in
J)oat. racing for many years and
who wert conspicuous in their ab
sence from the Jan. 1 races, have
bepn caught in the fever pitch of
t ie Memorial Day Events. Hick
Egger, previously a doubtful start starter;
er; starter; because of a broken jaw. has
bejen at the wheel of his "D" Run-
aoout and has announced that he
will be a starter in tomorrow's ev-
tiils, Brother George Egger has
entered bis "B" Runabout (Mer (Mercury)
cury) (Mercury) and P. Slag has added his
"D" Runabout to the many en entries
tries entries that will take part..
M Since the previous announcement
of m 5 event card, a few changes
bare been made. Winkea will be at
the- wheel of "B Flat" and Hud Hud-Kings
Kings Hud-Kings will be handling C Sharp.'
A new entry to the event is Larry
Doby who istentatively set to
drive in the "A" Hydro event Wer Wer-ley,
ley, Wer-ley, Evans, whose boat was dam damaged
aged damaged in practive when it hit some
driftwood, has announced that he
will be ready tomorrow with his
boat in top shape.
f Sais hat entered hit "D"
Ronabout in the ulimited race
toe, the Mobil Oil Trophy, creat creatine
ine creatine added interested in what was
PQpviously scheduled te be a
rwe beat affair. The ether pair
efentries in thai event are Dave
Hinds "B" Hydroplane end Ed
A ru j
v nyarvpienv.
Starting time for the first race
naibeen set at 1 p.m. and no ad ad-miion
miion ad-miion will be charged.
I The Original Foam
I ACCEPT NO
.
ft
4

E)MIniDpDlID

Single (75M x 39") 67.60
Double (75" x 54") 93.45

;6" Single (75" x 39") 95.15
Doable (75" x 54") 131.55

;PiIIowg (Extra Large) 10.65
EASY CREDIT TERMS
e

1T7
f KTr Col
i a i
AGENCIAS V.
J Automobile Row 29-1

lotta'avslxth' homer of the year
was the decisive blow as the
fourth-place Marlins kept- with within
in within three games of front-running
Buffalo.
The Buffalo Bisons remained
three percentage points ahead
of Richmond by belting Toronto,
8-5. Steve Nagy' pitched shutout

Brooklyn Dodgers and New York
Giants were set for the "Califor
nia gold rush of 58" today in a
package deal that may also trans transform
form transform the Cincinnati Redlegs into a
New York franchise.
The way for the most drastic re revision
vision revision of the'- major league base baseball
ball baseball map in history was officially
paved yesterday when National
League clubowners unanimously
consented to permit the Dodgers
to shift to Los Angeles and the
Giants to San Francisco. The own
ers stipulated both clubs must
make up their minds before Oct. 1.
General manager Gabe Paul of
the Redlegs did not ask similar
permision to transfer the Cincin Cincinnati
nati Cincinnati franchise but a ton baseball
official told' the United Press the
Redlegs will move to New -York if
the two otner clubs move out. It
was the same official who inform-
ea the United Press of the deve-
lonments whlcn occurred vpsfer
day.
The biecest bombshell to hit
baseball in years resulted in the
10" J
majvi iiuucj i vv ague til ivcw
York said he will "do everything
i can to Keep tne Dodgers and
wants in iNew York. Wagner is
scheduled to take the matter up
loaay in an emergency meeting
with other city officials.
Mayor Norm Pulson ofLos
i Angeles arrived In New York to

iJ.)re.s the matter with President

fly waiter O'Malley of the Dodgers
7 and L. A. county supervisor Ken Ken-ay
ay Ken-ay neth Hahn predicted the Dodgers
T will announce m, a few days that

ByTIMMORIARTY ; S
NEW YORK, May 29 (UP) If there are any
members of the Dodgers and the Giants harboring

misgivings about their proposed transfers to Call
fornia, they ought to consult Warren1 Spahn:

Since moving west with the old
Boston Braves, to Milwaukee four
years ago, Spahn has proved he
is lust as good pitcmng on me
shores of Lake Michigan as he
was during his younger days on
the banks of the Charles River.
The wily, 36 year old south
paw hooked up witn Cincinnati's
young uon uross in an oid-iasnion-
ed pitching duel last night at Mil Mil-waukee.
waukee. Mil-waukee. Gross had a no-hit, no
run game going until the eighth
inning when Bobby Thomson led
off the frame with a triple and lat
er scored on Frank Torre's single
to give spann ana tne Braves a i i-0
0 i-0 victory.
The Braves' triumph allowed
them to move to w i t h i n 2 1-2
games of pace setting Cincinnati
and to within a half game of the
Dodgers, who dropped a 3-2, 11 11-inning
inning 11-inning decision to the Pittsburgh
Pirates. In other National League
Heartbreaker
Cincinnati
Ab RVH Po
Temple 2b 4
post rt 4
Bell cf 4
Robinson If
Crowe lb ,.,
a-jef fcoat ;
Bailey c ....
Hoak 3b
McMillan ss
Cross p , .
Totals
34
0 8 24 8
Milwaukee
O'Connell 2b
Mantilla 3b
Aaron rf .
pafko If ...
Thomson cf
Logan ss
Torre lb .........
0 ,1
0 0
0 0
Crandalle .......
Spahn p
Totals V- 26 1 27
a-Ran for Crowe In 9th. s
Cincinnati
Us
000 000 0000
Milwaukee
000 000 Olx I
Error O'ConnelL RBI To
rre. Double Robinson. TrlDle
Thomson, Doubleplays Logan
to O'Connell to Torre 2.' Left on
base: Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 2.
Bases on balls Gross 1. 3.0;
Gross 2. Spahn 3. Run and earn
ed runs Gross l and 1. Wild
pitch Gross. WP: Spahn (5 (5-2).
2). (5-2). LP: Gross (4-1).
Dust
MALBORO TO MEET CERVEZA
BALBOA IN PRATIC1 GAME
FRIDAY AT ABEL BRAVO GYM
, By HERBERT MOISE
COLON The Marlboro basket
ball team from Colon will meet
the defending champions of the
Pnama Provincial Basketball
League in a pre-season game on
Friday at 8 p.m. at the Abel Bravo
gymnasium. These same teams
will begin the 1957 season official officially
ly officially on June 8 at the National Gym
in Panama City, v All games of
this league will be played in the
caoital. '
Marlboro (ex Chesterfield) fin
isbed second last season as they
lost in the final playoff same to
Balboa who then, won their first
chamoionshio in about. 10 years,
This Balboa team has gone under
several names but finally became
rhimrx under the BDonaorahiD of
the National Brewery. Marlboro
on the other hand has been Ches
terfield ud until this upcoming sea
son. Also unlike the present
champions, they have neia tne
title three times in. the last five
vein.
Alone: with Callite. Marlboro and
Cerveza Balboa are considered the
teams most likely to win the Cham
pionship. Gallito on the strength
that ia roumt players with sdd.
ed experience and the acquisition
of Arturo Aeard plus the reported
improvement 01 ssmon ueyes.
Balboa and Marlboro botn have
lost top players which would tend
to make them a bit weaker .than
last eeason.
Balboa has lost the services of
Billv Cohen, who plays with Marl
boro this season, ana hbui nooner.
It ia also reported that Frank
Hornets may soon leave tbe team
and travel to Sooth America. Marl
boro has tost tbe services of
George SewelL Isaac Peltynovich
and Carlos Hyacinth. These boys
are presently studying ia the
States and will not return Uus sea
son.
Wifk the season lust around
the corner, the Marlboro high com
mand has selected beautiful Isa
bel Medina Marquet to be "madri "madri-na"
na" "madri-na" for the club on opening night
This lady from Panama will par-
ade with the duo during ue open
ing game ceremonies.

.... .

Cetitari CCNRACO-

night games; Larry Jackson pitch pitched
ed pitched the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-1
triumph over the Chicago, Cubs,
and the Phillies, w h ip p e d the
Giants, 16-6.
In American League action, the
White Sox retained their two
game held en first place by down
ing the Athletics, 3-1; the Indians
shaded the Tigers, 4-3, and the
Yankees scored thrtt runt in1
the 10th inning fo defeat the Red
Sox. 8-5. Baltimore and Wash"
ington were no! scheduled.
Spahn allowed eight hits in chalk
ing up his fifth victory of the sea

son and his third over the Red
legs this year. He has always
been tough on Cincinnati and now
holds : a '42-14 lifetime ; record a
gainst the Redlegs. :.-,
After Gros blew bis no-bit bid
the Redlegs tried to save the
game for their young left hander
in the ninth when they, got men on
first and second with none out
But Spahn pitched out of the jam
by retiring pinch-runner Hal Jeff-
coat on a bunt and then got Don
Hoak to hit ino a game ending
aouDie piay. a was Gross' first
defeat against four) victories.
Pittsburgh relief pitcher Elroy
Face won his own game against
tne Dodgers when he scored on
Peewee Reese's wild throw to the
plate in the 11th inning. The bases
were loaded with one out when
Roberto Clemsnte grounded to
Reese, whose toss to catcher Al
Walker hit. the dirt and skidded
past the plate. Don Newcombe ab
sorbed the los, his fourth against
lour wins.
The Phillies ran up their high
est run total in nearly three years
against tne Giants. Winning pitch,
er Bob Miller, Rip Repulski, Wil
lie Jones and Stan Lopata 1 each
drove in three, runs. Johnny An
tonelli failed to retire a single
oauer as tne rails noppea on mm
for our runs in the first inning
ana nanaea mm his sixth 10s.
Jackson, a relief pitcher, was a
warded with his second start of
the season against the Cubs '; and
promptly set them down with only
five hits. The Cardinals collected
nine hits off three Chicago pitch
era, including a single by.Wally
Moon that enabled him to run his
hitting streak through 21 games.
ftooKie Bill tiscner allowed on
ly -six hits in pitching the White
Sox to their win over the A's. He
lost his bid for a shutout in the
fourth inning on a homer by Hal
smitn. it was. the White Sox', 12th
victory in uieir las 13 games.
ine Red box came from behind
to tie the Yankees 5-5. on Ted
Williams' ltlh homer of the sea
son. But Hank Bauer doubled
home two runs for the world cham-
Sions in the 10th and then Gil Mc Mc-ouglad
ouglad Mc-ouglad singled home the "icer."
A two run pinch homer in the
ninth by Ed Robinson, who was
released by Detroit only two weeks
ago, enabled the Indians to defeat
the Tigers. Don Mossi held the
Tigers to only three hits in t h e
first eight innings but was trailing
3-2 when he gave way in the ninth
to Ray Narleski, who gained the
victory. ;
lo Discuss
Monza Race Future
Organizers
MILAN, Italy, May 29 (UP)
World auto racing chamn Juan
Manuel Fangio of Argentina said
today that the recently founded
International Professional Drivers
Union would discuss future parti
cipation in xnonza auo mile race
witn the race a Italian organizers
in tbe next few days.
Fangio. who arrived her h ar
from Nuremburg, Germany, short-
1 1 j. 1 . .
ij bii.cs- tuiuniKni, reiusea to mate
any comment on the Drivers U U-nion
nion U-nion decision to boycott the Monza
race unless the organizers decide
to bold it on the "flat" roadway
track, avoiding the socaHed "high
speed", overbanked circuit
"The Drivers Union took a very
definite stand and refused to add a
single word to the official commu
nique which was distributed after
our meeting, "Fangio said. "Our
delegation, composed of Louis
Chiron, Piero Taruffi and Umber-
to Maglioli, will discuss the touchy
issue wiia ue stanza organizers in
ine next lew days.
The Monza race micrht thru into
failure if the drivers boycott ma
terializes.
Tbe unprecedented safety first
rebellion came Sunday at a meet
ing in Nurnourgnng, Germany at attend
tend attend Fangio, Stirling Moss, Peter
Collins, Mike Hawthorn, Roy Sal Salvador!,
vador!, Salvador!, Tony Brooks, Haas Her Hermann,
mann, Hermann, Harry Shell, Maurice Trin Trin-tignant."
tignant." Trin-tignant." Umberto Maglioli, R01
Florkhart and Carles Mendtteguy.
Ail said they considered the high
speed circuit too dangerous for
tne race wherein 10 Americans
will race 10 Europeans. . .'
SARCEANT

Ken Rose wall, along with Jack

Kramer, Pancho Segura, and Din-
ny rails will play at ifil Panama,
on Saturday and Sunday nights.
By the end of 1956 shrewd : Ken
RosewaH had trumped the other
Australian ace. Lew Hoad. and
emerged the undisputed kingpin of
amateur tennis. ,
S: There was no other place to go
in the amateur- net world, so Rose-
wau turned pro.
Behind him Rosewall left '. an
Impressive array ef records. He
dominated the court seen, a a-reund
reund a-reund he world, winning .almost
everything in sight, at one time
er another.
As early as 1953 Rosewall be
came the national chatffeion of
Australia in both singles and Aim.
bles. He followed this with a World
doubles chamnionshin at Wimble
don in !53, with Hoad as his partner-
ltiv (
I.
kEN ROSEWALL i
ji
In that year Rosewall was but
18 years old, which prompted net
observers to ask, "What'll happen
when the Kid grows up?"
Jtosewall answered the question
himself last" year, when, a f t e r
having reached voting age,, Jhe
pummeled Hoad in the finals of
the United States Singles Cham
pionship- at F 0 r e s t Hills. The
scores were 4-6, 6-2 6-3. 6-3 in as
fine a display of precision and
control as has ever been seen on
such a windy day in the Stadium
That .victory for Rosewall not
only ended Hoad s Quest for
grand slam but also moved Rose
wall into a position of dominance
over his Aussie ttammate for the
first time in their: brilliant ea.
reers. From that point on Rose
wall continued to master Hoad in
three straight tournaments. :.
Tbe biggest thing in amateur
tennis Is the Davis Cup and so,
naturally, that is where Rosewall
nas been his greatest Rosewall
played In eight Challenge Round
singles matches against the Unit United.
ed. United. States in the past four years
ana won six of those encounters.
in 1953 the outcome of th rji.i.
lenge Round rested solely on Rose-
wau, witn tne United States and
Australia tied at 2-2. In the pres-
aure-pacsea aeciaing singles
match Rosewall scored lUdaivs
iour-sei victory over Vic Seixas..
. -wv-
in aaoiuon to the U.S. and Aus Aussie
sie Aussie singles championship,: Rose-
wan also won the French singles,
laiing uus uue in 1933. w
Rosewall has won every Impor Important
tant Important men's doubles crewn m the
werM with Head as his partner.
In 1953 the Aussie Whiz Kid a
. ceptured the Australian, French
and Wimbledon deubles title for
e near clean sweep. They had
te wait untiM$4 however, te
take the U.S. doubles, a title
they captured a second time in
lvSe, ;
Tbe Wimbledon alncl. I. V.
ne crown which evaded Rose-
wan, out twice he came close. In
1954, he was the runner-up to an
inspired Jaroslav Drobnv and fact
year he was the runner un to
uoaa.
ROSewtD Came rlnaa tit tn .!-
glee victories in a row at Forest
Hills, finishing ss runner-up te
iony iTsoert in 1955 prior t owin
defeat by beating Tridrt
ning last year. Een svenged that
ia uieir nrst professional meeting
S2, 4-4 at Sydney in Februa
ry i7. r, 4 w

EDITOR'S' NOTE: This ts the
sixth ef 12 articles written fer
NEA Service and. The Paname
American by Ed Dudley, prefee prefee-eienel
eienel prefee-eienel e the Aweuste Narienet,
who includee President t-f
hewer emeng bis famews pupils
Ry ID DUCLIY
START the downswing "With a
slight tug of the left hand aid
arm.
If the downswing Is started pro
perly, there is bo body action st
e beginning.
Thereafter the body automatic
ally starts to move and the weight
shifts. This enables the left side
to
turn out of the way at impact
The
hands and arms automatica
lly follow through. If you start
tie downswing correctly, every-;
thing follows through. This is wfay
start of the downswing is so
important j
At tbe start of the downswing
the
player should beer ia mind
that

te compte muscular mtchi-istant

aery engaging in a tremendons j svsre of and master through re re-surge
surge re-surge of per in the rerere di- petition.

On-lomoi'rov
1 r'
The third Albrook Invitational
Basketball Tournament will 1 take
place at the .Albrook Gym; Thurs
day,,, Friday and Saturday, May
30-31 and June 1st" T 1-
Six teams will participate in the
single elimination tourney. ?

m. the losers' of the two Friday o
night games will play for the third

pace position ana at. s:w p.m.
(this game will be broadcasted ov-

er CFN) Albrook should be play- ;
ing Clayton for the championship,
A first place and runner tin trin

hy will be presented Immediate-v

after tne last game, pius a most

valuable player award. ' .-v'i'

To those who come, this could
be bird's eye view of the up and
coming PAAF League which is
scheduled to start 8 June.,.
No. 6'
. .t:
This Is correct but It Is
the
spht-eecond definition at this in-
that tbe pupil must become
,

To Have Free Admission;
A ten-race program will be held at the President
Remott, racetrack in observance of. the May 30 U,S.
holiday. A $600 Beven furlong sprint for fourth se series
ries series imported thoroughbreds will be the mam event
and has been denominated theMetriorial Day Handicap-
;r ) . .i ; v -;
Servicemen in uniform will admitted free to the
track's premises. -'. t
Members of the Paraiso Mutual Aid Society
will be guests of the track management.

gainst a 'stronger group last Sat Saturday
urday Saturday when Jbe returned to the
races after a long layoff.' This
time Ruben Vasquez will guide the
Stud 32 star in place of Julio Ro Rodriguez
driguez Rodriguez who has been suspended.
v XI Fakir and Embrujada should
also be heavily backed in the mu mu-fuels,
fuels, mu-fuels, The latter was an impres impressive
sive impressive winner in a much weaker
field last Sunday under the guid-
anee of Julio Rodriguez. Cristian
Rebolledo will ride, the Stud. La
Enea mar this time,
El Fakir was second In a photo
behind Maria Stuardo in S a t u r r-day'a
day'a r-day'a nightcap.- Alfredo Vasquez
' will do the booting aboard him

kir and should be in the thick of

things at the finish again. (
John Cadbgati, who has pot won
a race since getting his license
recently out at the new track, will
be doing his utmost to break into

experience. rWe think he's every bit as good aa Bert Flel. 1 j-
x Judge Ryan seemed letdown, too. At one point he snapped:
"Let'a get this thing- ever with." By then we suspect physical
htim. ..u Mtohinr nn with him. for he had spent a larce

part of the tnoraing cracking down on- a young government

eager beaver, who had been tossing objections au over the
premises. : t ; : -- i '"r---;
Earlier tha Judge. j-. who has already found IBC guilty of
mtmnnniMmr rhamnlnniihIA florhtji UlA ia nOw tTvinflf to make

up his mind what penalities-to impose. . gave the courtroom

an Insight into his thinking. . .
?-'y'"'"TiW.liidiaald he was toying with the Idea of mailng jt
compulsory lor Madison Square Garden (local residence of IBC)
to rent the arena to any promoter who wants it for a cham championship
pionship championship fight. The rent had to be reasonable. II necessary,
th rourt would fix tho rent itself. ''.."

defending the heavyweight championship against Hurricane
' Jackson here next month. Mr. Lence sees this one as an out outdoor
door outdoor spectacular, drawing between $600,000 and' $700,000.
. Neither, tho Jndfe nor the government,' Incidentally, had
anything to do with IBC. . which 1 abort for Big Jim Nor.
rta. not participating in this promotion. After "winning; the
championabjp smder IBC- auspices tho champion, throagh bis
snaaarer. switched aOegiance. . and since the manager still
was lr. N orris 15,0, the IBC head at least has a chance to
sarvare ooniethlng If tho prometUn.ta a success.
To set back Co the courtroom. i it is the consensus of press
table oninion that: tho government will be denied its request
that Mr. Non-U sell hi stock and disassociate himself from Gar Garden
den Garden operation,--.-. .'. v ".
As a matter of fact, the Judge has stated he "never would
atgn" a decree directing a forced sale of the N orris stock. And
hi remarks yesterday on compelling the Garden toopen its
doors to independents was interpreted as the compromise under
which Mr. Norrls would be permitted to continue his promotions
; -.ifLf"-:...,BOX OITICE IS DEAD r
Tnt anatomical abnormality, wherein the tall shakes the
dog, as accented anew at yesterday'a hearings when Mr. Gibson
aaid IBC rarely has a box-olice lsterest in out-of-town fighU
to which it owns TV right. - ..
One exeeptioa was wh'n Sorar Ray Robinson demanded a
S7S.N0 gearaBtee to meet Bob Olson in Los Anrelea. IBC got
It op and ia slfpretction became a co-promoter, earn tnt a
STftoe preflt. Geera.Ily local oromoUrs take all the gate. The
tmportaat money Is la TV. anyway.
When tho names of the promoters- were effered to evidence
the eowsment objected." "The record will show these men
as promO- of Hphts without any proof.-. I
Mclns; the Judge to interrupt. . "the record will also show
the court raid no attention to the statement they were, in fact,
the promoters." ; --. ;
The ludjre had trot off a goodie and he swept the courtroom
ri'.h a wondrous Ina smile that seemed to say: "How about
ttatl"

par 70 Sunday to win the first an
nual Land of the Sky Women's
Open tournament for her second
straight tournament triumph. She

tiBa won me recent Gatlinburg
Women's Open.
'Miss Hanson wound nn th

- r V.'V (UUJ
day tournament with a total 288,
one stroke ahead ,of 20-year old
Wifft Smith; Orange, Tex., who
had led her by one stroke going
into the finalr ound. Miss Smith
had a 72 in the final round.
- Mickey Wright. San y Diego,
Calif., shot aix-under'-par 68
Sunday to tie' the course I record
which Miss Hanson had set Thurs Thursday.
day. Thursday. Her blazing finish lmntMi

his teammate from Tinley Park,
I1L, was fastest Sunday at 142.439
mTh late Bill Vukerkh set the
rac record of 130440 mp h. in
1954. -.- .
Despit the worst qualification
weather U the postwar ra, the
time triala wmmd vp oa schedule
late Sunday. Thirty -three of the TO
attempt were mad oa tho final

Twenty-one cars completed tnetr
rana, bat only 12 of them barred
into the race day lineup. And the

field's overall speed of 141.444 is

WrittMt far NIA Sorvk
QUESTION: A line drive bite an
umpire as the third baseman starts

for the balL What is the caM here?

Answer: The batter is entitled
to first base. If the drive had gone
past an infielder, the hit the um umpire,
pire, umpire, the ball would be in play
ad the batter entitled to aa muck
as ho can get'
Q. In moving from first to sec

ond base on ground ball, the
runner vntntentioaalhr bangs into

the second basemaa fielding the

ball. Is there ruling o this?

Dick Roberts... ......
A. The runner is -cut, tuuotea tuuotea-Uonal
Uonal tuuotea-Uonal or not
Q. When a pitcheT put hie band

to his mouth before, starting his
windup. as so an any do, is there
a rule covering his motions which

if

.'a,...-
A,

1

:
-

4 -v.

I
u "7
!-
It
I

HEADED FOR BIG TIME 'I Harrison Hoyt pute Buckey -Demon
throurh fast workout at the Saratora Springs, N.Y-, ? A
, Raceway. The eolt Is headed for the "Grand Circuit.

perb studies of the human heart persons The Philippines
aiid circulatory system -of the ; been stricken fa the mfluensa
body, and the sun. Directed by 'wdemie bow rsgiag through the
rrank Capra. these XUma are ex- was esurosted tod a v.
eellentty done and are hlrhly, ff. 1 deaths have been re re-educatlooal
educatlooal re-educatlooal as wll as enleruin- .I-. v. J
in - e. I Thailand reported its Tint Inflo

Take a Jungle Jjm Jaunt Boat
Excursion to the i San Bias Is-) 1
lands. THE FIRST OF A SERIES
OF WEEK-END TRIPS TO SAN
- BLAS BY BOAT. Leaves Balbea
J pier 17, 7:00 a.m. Friday, Mayp
31st. Return to Cristobal Sunday
evening ; 5:00 p.m.. June 2nd.
$48.00 each parson, Leevee
Strangers Club, Colon 10:00 p.,
: m. May 3 1 sr. $45.00 each per-
sonor those who are interested
: in going through the Canal only,..:
the price is $7.00 including
. lunch. First night aboard', the
cruiser i "Pascadera." : '. Second
. night h spent at San Bias' Islands
Hotel; Don't forget your camera :
and awim suit. Far further in- r
formation see Jungle Jim at He-
tel Eli-Panama or phone Panama'
3-1660 days or 3-1326 nights.
US TELEVISION MEANS FINE
SIRVICI TV -LOCAL service
r calls $2.50, call before 7 p.m. for
"same day service. Phone 2-461 6.
Boats & Motors
FOR SALE; Boats; 30 foot
i cruiser 275 hp, Hall Scott an-
, gina, in excellent condition. Also
22 .foot cruiser with Dodge en-.
' fine, needs some repairs. Telei'
.phone Balboa 4143. f
Homeless
Cloudbursts eontinusA t lUhnTtsaeo
flood -; stricken sections nf th
Southwest todav. whern ahnnt 1.
000 persons have bean f n r a
fromtheir homes.
At Inset twA 44k.
blamed oa 1he swirline waters
from, flash floods in -Texas, Okla Oklahoma,
homa, Oklahoma, Arkansas and. Missouri.
: More ,lhan B.OOO persons driven
from, their homes at Dallas and
on wortft during the t weekend
remained in temporary shelters
aa the Trinity River continued its
VOp to, 10V4 Inches f r a 'n
flooded the little town ef Sabi Sabi-rial.
rial. Sabi-rial. Tax., west of Sen Antonio,
and.aboHrt 7 Inches fell at Well-,
man, -southwest of Lubbock.
. A Ul-lnch deluee at San An.
tonio touched off flash floods that
forced, some 200 persons to flee
their homes. At least 12 'persons
u appea in ueir nomes by the
sudden, floods were rcsruiul hv
Hce. ..
-A levee on the Trinity' River
broke-south of .Dallas,-inundating
valuable farmland and v flooding
some homes. - !' ... t
: United Pres' photogrsher Jer Jerry
ry Jerry McNeill helped rescue four
persons stranded In tree tops-. Jo
the rural area. McNeill "was ; a a-board
board a-board a rescue boat cruising- the
flooded area.
The flood victims were John Sy Sy-rlng,
rlng, Sy-rlng, 7, washed from a truck in a
culvert south of San Antonio,- and
Nathan E. Harris. 40. Cook's
Rsmp, Ark., who drowned, in the
Arkansas River when a horse he
was riding was swept away.
Serious floodinf we a report eel
alone the Arkansas River as the
flood crest relied toward Fort
Smith, Ark. ,
; In Oklahoma, about 50 roads
were closed by high water and
washouts, and highway engineers
dumped fill along the banks of
Lake Texoma tiear Durant, Okla.,
in an exiort to ssve the U.S. 70
bridge, across the Washita River.
Floodwatera also 'spilled over
rtfJh Delta land In southeastern
Missouri after levees on the Mis Missouri
souri Missouri and St, Francis rivers
broke; v ;
: FieeeJ' etamete ht the f r
faros waa ceuntod in the mll mll-liona
liona mll-liona ef eVallars.
Shower and Isolated thunder thunderstorms
storms thunderstorms were reported during the
morning from eastern New Mexi
co and Texas north into the Da-
kotas. Showers and thunder thunderstorms
storms thunderstorms also occurred in the East
along -the coast from New Eng England
land England tp Florida. : .
A cool Ait mass from Canada
overspread the entire eastern
third of the nation today, caasing
light frost In the extreme North
wbea readings plunged into the
30s in the upper Crest Lakes region..-
.-' v "-: ;
Flu Epidemic Rages
Through Far East
MANILA May 2 (UP Some
enia esses while Jspanese health i
sion of the diaesse. I

WANTID: An experienced op-1-
; orator, must speak snglisn. Call
.Curundu Beauty Shop, 2113.,
: WANTED: Factory spaced 50
x 50 meters with office, store-
. room and packing apace in Pa'
., ama City. Write Box 4941, Pan-
: Sma. R..-P. ,):': ..:
'I : "i 1 f "- I.' l.l ll. t
'WANTED: Air conditioner.
, adding machine, Venotian blinds.
Call Panama 2-5474.
...WANTED s One or two room a-
r partment with bathroom.., Phone
1-1891 from 8:00 a.m. to 11:30
a.m. and from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. i
WANTED Want to place ax-;
'Calient cook, cannot live In.
1-1813.
L
Real Estate
FOR SALE! Modern home.
Three bedrooms! two bathrooms,'1:
: large -kitchen,- living room and
dining room,.- porches on i side, i
rear and front of house, maid's
room, hot and cold watar, situat situated
ed situated at top of Santa Rita. Moun Mountain
tain Mountain altitude 860 feet .Always
cool, only 20 minutes drive from
the city of Colon. Priced to aell.
' Telephone Colon 43
IIYFalher Beateii,
Slashed To Death
Cy College Youlh
NEW YORK. May 29 -(UP)-A
21-yearHld college .student, who
underwent mental observation- last
year,- beat and slashed his father
to death in the family home today
and then told his mother about it
on the telephone, police 'reported.
Anthony Giordano, a Brooklyn
college political science major,
answered the telpehone when his
mother called from work. He told
ner ne nan just- Kuiea ms joDiess
father Franks 51, and tht called
. wnen nonce arrived v at tne
Brooklyn residence, they found
young Giordano emerging from
the basement. ; hh was covered
from head to foot with blood, po
lice said, land' was seized after a
brief scuffle. v,'-4 1 r-
The father's -body- was found In
pool of blood in the cellar. Po
lice said his head had been
smashed and his wrists slashed,
length of wood and several, razor
blades were near the body, police
said. e
Mrs. Girodano told polite her
son underwent observation at the
Kings Park :jState Hospital last
year.
Knovflsnd Promises
Civil Rlghb Bill
Will Reach Floor
WASHINGTON May t ( UP)
Sen. William F. Knowland (Calif)
promised today that Republicans
would make determined efforts to
get the controversial. civil rights
bill to the Senate floor as soon as
the House passes it. ,
The Senate GOP leader talked
to reoorteri : following a White
House legislative conference.
Meantime.' there was heated de
bate over the JegUlation on the
Senate floor.,
Knowland said "several alterna
tive moves" are being considered
to prevent the bill from bogging
down : indefinitely in committee.
"We -don't intend to delay until
the closings weeks of the session."
be added. j ; - 4
House Republican Leader Jo
seph W. Martin (Mass) ssid the
House bill will go to the floor for
general debate June a tnrougn
June 18. He predicted the House
will pass it by dune 12 or IX
Romania Comes;
Back Into WHO
LONDON, Msy 28 (UP) Ro
mania is preosring to rejoin the
United Nations World Health Or
ganisation after a seven-year ab
sence. Radio Bucharest said yes
terday.
Romania xuned the agency in
June, .148, and left early in 1950
along with most of the other So Soviet
viet Soviet satellite countries.
All but Hungary. Cxechoslovskia.
Byelorusia and the Ukraine have
rejoined in recent months.

the Lving room, Then he shot V
Mrs". Parry, jvho wai in the bed
room. Before shooting himself, he

picked up the-telephone and told,
the operator; t-"I just, shot two7
people." j i
English Churchman
Speaks For Unity, ;
Even Under Pope v
WOLVERHAMPTON, itng." Ma j
29 (UP) Dr, Geoffrey Fisher,
the archbishop of Canterbury. c
cused the Roman Catholic Church
in Britain Monday night of waging
an "open war-' against the cnurcn
of England. -.. (
rHch ef Enqland reJ -A
late t eld a conference ef
. .-.chmen here he would like
to see all the churches of t h S),
world bound together In one
body, perhaps -with Pope Plus ",
XII as a chairman.
- ... -r j i" ,- r v : -'.
"If the Pope would Eke to eome
in as cnsirman oi a Joint council
of churches we should iH w e l l-come
come l-come him," he ssid., s
But be said the Roman Catholic
Church in BriUin -was "hostile'
to the established Church of Eng England
land England and did not work with it as
Catholics work together with other
churchmen in Europe..
.. . .. ;
Tkert is a lot of direct hostiH-
ty to the church, led, I am sorry
to ssy, by the Roman Catholics in
this country," he said. "The Ro Roman
man Roman Catholic Church in Britain
fk waging an open war- against
the Church of England, unlike
its friendly counterparts of the
continent.' r
TELE -RAD
SPEEDV
DEPENDABLE
, t
- FI !io

"A DIME'S WORTH, PLEASE"- oon a ho i eU hit ear
gaased by attendant Pred Sop Jr.. young Joseph Amendolia and
hit girl friend, Joanne Benchowiki, will bo off on a sporty run
through Island Park. N.Y. They ride a real sporta car,
signed for use in back yards and off-street play areas. PoweroB
by a gasoline engine with automatic transmission, the 80-inch
car's speed can bo adjusted from 5 to 30 miles per hour. Tho
body is molded of one-piece celanese resin. Battery-operated
lights, pneumatic tires and vinyl-rovered foam-rubber seats
add t the realism. Engine in rear affords easy access.

Let the people know the truth arid the country is safe Abraham Lincoln.

J2nd YEAR

PANAMA, R. P.r WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1957

FTVB CENT!

Hoise Quashes

m
$80 Million To Army's

Movement To Restore

Pared budget

WASHINGTON, May 29 (UP)

President Elsenhower suffered a
first-round defeat in the military
,budget battle today when the
House rejected an attempt to re restore
store restore 80 million dollars of the pared-down
Army appropriation.
With the economy bloc firmly
In control, the House overrode
House Republican leaders and vot vot-'
' vot-' ed 145 to 113 to defeat a proposal
by Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich.)
to restore a little more than half
of a 150 million dollar slash in
Army funds..
On the showdown veto, ,many
conomy-mindtd rank and file
Republicans bolted th leader leader-a
a leader-a hip and opposed the-1 Ford
mendment.

The action was a setback for
the Eisenhower forces in the
House who hoped to restore $344,-

500,000 of the $2,587,000,000 trim- tion of the cuts the best they could

med from the big military money

bill by the House Appropriations
Committee. ,
However, the House then ap

proved with no audjble objection
an amendment to let the Army
use 10 million dollars in .unspent

funds to continue its training pro

gram, i

The vote came only hours after

the President had told GOP con

gressional leaders he was disap disappointed
pointed disappointed with their decision to fight

for the restoration of only about

one-fourth of the $1,274,000,000 in

cuts he regards as "crippling" to

the armed forces.

But the Republican leaders told

the chief executive that the "real "realities"
ities" "realities" of the congressional econo economy
my economy drive made a partial restora-

PRESIDENTS THEATRE
OPENING TOMORROW!

A LAVISH TECHNICOLOR PRODUCTION BASED ON1
THE LIFE AND LOVES OF RICHARD WAGNER!

The President : originally" asked
for $36,128,000,000 to run the Army,
Navy, and Air Force in the ; new
fiscal year starting July But
the committee clashed .this total

to $33,541,000,000.

In trimming the military budg
et. the committee slashed the $3,'

400,000,000 request for the opera

tion of the'. Army to 3,i45,zoo,oou.
About 150 million dollars of this
cut was regarded by the admini administration
stration administration was vital. h ,
Before voting on the Ford pro proposal,
posal, proposal, the House rejected, 151 to
32, a proposal by Rep. Leon Gavin
(R-Pa.) to restore the lull 150 mil million
lion million dollars of the Army slash.
The crucial vote followed an
impassioned plea by House ? Re Republican
publican Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin
Jr. (Mass.) who said that thejeom thejeom-mittpp
mittpp thejeom-mittpp aooroved cuts would force

'drastic readjustments" in; t B e

military, .
"If war comes," he aid, "I

'Blithe Spirit'
To Open Clayton's i

Jadwin Hall Tonight

Tonight at 8 p.m. the curtain

raises on "Buttr spirit r ai on,
Clayton's Jadwin Hall.
This will be a first night in two

respects. The Noel Coward comeay
will be the first production of the
Caribbean Players, and also the
first production to appear on the

driver who blew the $84,000 s ques question,
tion, question, returned to the TV quiz wars
this week with his wife on his

arm, but ashes in his mouth.
Einfrank, a geography expert,

lost his relatives, his friends and,
he thought, his wife last January

when he missed the top question
on "The $64,000 Question." He

even had to sell his Cadillac con

solation prize to help pay ." some
debts.

This .Sunday, Al came back to

TV as a contestant on "the 164,000

Challenge." His wife came back,
too Saturday. j
Time ran out before Einfrank
got a question to answer Sunday
night. He'll return next week to
the Challange.
"I was the loneliest man in the
world after I missed that ques question,"
tion," question," said Al today. "But even

though I lost the money.. I lost a
bunch of hungry relatives and

fair-weather friends. If I win any anything
thing anything now, my relatives can go to
hell I'd rather give the money
to charity first" v v
Al, a 57-year old truck driver
for Douglas Aircraft whose take take-home
home take-home pay is $65 a week, reached
the $32,000 level Jan! l after
knocking off a series of questions

on geography. On Jan. 8, he de

cided to go for tne big one.
"You should have seen all the

relatives that turned up at that
show." said Al, "all of them look

ing for a hand-out. People I hadn't
seen in years. That last week, I

didn't get any sleep, I couldn't
eat, they wouldn't even let me go
to the bathroom,
"They all kept hollering 'Quit
now, Al. Quit while you got $32, $32,-000.
000. $32,-000. Don't be a fooL Al, can you
spara me $500?' j

$1,000 apiece."
Wheit'AI get into the isolation
booth, he didn't care what hap
ponod. "I wont in that booth dis disturbed
turbed disturbed and when I misted that
question, I said to myself--. 'I'm
8ld, I'm lad," said Al.
Al sold the Cadillac for $6,000,

He gave $500 to his wife, $500 to

uie Hungarian ireeaom iigmeri

and paid off $2,500 worth of debts
He bought a second hand Olds
mobile and drove home alone.

"People all acnoss the country
were wonderful to me," said Al,
"but I got real sick in Tucson,
Ariz., and had to be put in an

oxygen tent in the- county hospl

It was like a volcano had .blown

up in my iieari. ,.

1 left the hospital- after six

days and drove back to L.A. and

got my old job back and the guys

at Douglas were Just great. But
not one word from my relatives
or my fair weather friends. And
for four months, not a word from

my wife. I felt sick inside.

"But I had misconstrued about
my wife. She was just taking care

of our daughter and grandchildren
and son-in-law outside of Washing Washington.
ton. Washington. They were all sick, i;
"So when I sot word last Thurs

day that I was going to be on
'Challenge,' I called her up and
said 'What goes? Who's more
important after 32 and a half years

of marriage me or my son-claw?"
She cam into New York
on. Saturday," :,

' "The noof kid was frlehtered.

looking down at the Marines and
the guards on the masts, all with
guns. He kept saying 'I'm scared.

I'm scared.' Finally... he said if

ms mother would come ever he

would give himself up.
1 Henderson, dispensing clerk
third class, was busted to sea
man and sentenced to four
. months in the brir yesterdav

for possession of another man's
wrist watch. ..,

He was accused of findine the

watch and failing to return it to

sue ngnuui owner.

The sailor's anger over his sen

tence boiled over this morning.
Armed with a wrench, ha went
to the ship's bridge and sluvcxed

Motor Machinist's Mate sc Jo

seph H. Verbeek, 22, Oakland,

canr., wno was on watch.

Henderson grabbed verbeek's

.45 automatic pistol and raced to
the officer's section of the ship.
' He entered the room of Ens.
Arthur? L. Morris, Henderson'
division officer aboard ship. He
fired twice, hitting Harrison
once in the abdomen and once
1 in the arm. , v
" The wounded man stumbled
out of. the room and called to
another officer that he had been
shot The alarm was sounded and
the shin was awakened, but by

this, time Henderson had taken

an enlisted man as hostage to
the bridge of the 13,000- ton
transport. M' i

At 8 a.m. Chaplain Schnurr
walked calmly ud to Henderson

on the bridge and began talking

to him. He was joined later by

anotner cnapiain. hi. J.G. veru

D. Jeffords

During the moming hours Hen

derson steadfastly refused to

come down and clung to his Pi

tol, which officers surmised still

contained four bullets.

He, shouted that he wanted
publicity," and he was getting
it. Scores of newsmen and

photographers stood out el

gunshot range near, the pier.

Occasionally Henderson's head

could he seen over the edge oi
the bridge, which rises 30 feet
above the deck and extends the
width of the ship. The Uvalde

was tied up at a finger-shaped

pier, on the Oakland side of

Treasure Island In San Francisco
Bay.,.- . '.-..:,

. "We had a thousand chances
to shoot him down if we want wanted
ed wanted to, said Capt. Robert Ok
Beer, skipper of the Uvalde. 1
;, ; -vvi
During the time that Hender

son was holding out a dozen Na Navy
vy Navy and Marine sharpshooters
were stationed In the ship's rig-.
King and on the deck and pier,

waiting to open fire if ordered, i

"ii

11

v' t

' v' -." . XNEA Telephoto)

ON THE LOOKOUT Carrying: their weapons, awo, Haitian

UlitVVl U uvjIWf AS V4JD) 01 VVU tM J VWSV V1' 1V4

partisans who had roiled telenhone poles onto the main high'

way in and around Port-Au-Prince; After? 24 hours of violent
fighting between Army factions seeking control of the. country,

Prof. Daniel Fignole was sworn in as, provisional President

, v :- ; , of Haiti., . ,?

11

Fjghble Gabiriet Picked
To Draw Foreign ..Capital

' PORT, AU PRINCE. May 29
(UP) 'Provisional presiden.

Daniel Fignole-appointed a cab

inet-today to administer a pro

gram which be hopes will attract

foreign capital to nam.

Five of the 10 posts in the new

cawnet went to "supporters oi
Fignose's campaign for the pres presidency.
idency. presidency. The key ministries of in

contender in tthe notiyTiougnt
presidential race who is not rep represented
resented represented in the .new, cabinet,
charged, last night that it is "il "illegal
legal "illegal and unacceptable to the
people." t
Dejoie predicted the Fignole
regime will not last even for the
month which has been the aver-
age life expectancy of Haitian
governments since president, Paul
E. Magloira was overthrown ; in
December: .- j':i" :v"''iv1"-
Hgnole coupled the announce announcement
ment announcement of his,, cabinet appoint appointments
ments appointments with an appeal for foreign
capital to help rebuild Haiti's
crisis-wrecked economy.
Foreign observers noted i that
the Finance ministry was" the
only key cabinet post not held by
a Fignollst
.... H -f
'!" They surmised that the pro provisional
visional provisional president would like to
avoid direct responsibility for
the touchy task of patching to together
gether together thia country's finances.'
The new ministers are: f
. Foreign Affairs: pr.. Josef Bu-j

teau. a noted physician. v

Interior nad Defense; Leonce

Bernard.

Justice: Seymour Lamothe.

vain; former jdean of the Haitians

Finance:. Carlet Auguste, whe
held -the same post from 1043 to
1950. n